Iraq War Army Veteran Benjamin Barnes Found Dead in Mount Rainier National Park; Suspect in Death of Park Ranger Margaret Anderson (2012)

Benjamin Colton Barnes
Benjamin Colton Barnes, US Army Veteran

Related Links:
Park ranger killed by gunman in national park
Suspect in Ranger’s Slaying Was “Troubled and Vindictive”
Ranger shot, killed at Mount Rainier National Park
Mount Rainier park remains closed after shooting
Mount Rainier National Park closed; manhunt on for gunman who killed ranger
Manhunt after US park ranger shooting
Rainier National Park Ranger Shot: Suspect Armed And Hiding In Park
Authorities Find Body of Mt. Rainier Shooting Suspect
Suspect’s downward spiral ended with killing at Rainier
Mt. Rainier Body Is Murder Suspect: Police
Benjamin Barnes Identified as Gunman in Mt. Rainier Shooting of Margaret Anderson
Killer’s icy grave: Iraq war vet who gunned down park ranger is found dead after freezing to death in snow
Iraq war vet who murdered park ranger before freezing to death in snow was stationed at U.S. Army’s most troubled base
Benjamin Colton Barnes, Mount Rainier Gunman, Died Of Drowning, Hypothermia
Troubled picture emerges of suspect in park ranger’s slaying
Suspect in shooting of ranger, others found dead in park
Former Army private sought in Rainier shootings found dead
Mount Rainier shooting suspect Benjamin Colton Barnes confirmed dead
FBI: Suspect in Rainier ranger’s killing dead
Man Believed to Have Killed Park Ranger Is Found Dead
Icy death for suspected killer of park ranger
Suspect in ranger shooting is found dead
Suspect in ranger’s slaying found dead in creek
Mt. Rainier New Year’s shooter had Riverside County ties
Police: Body found at Rainier park is that of gunman who killed ranger
Troubled vet on lam dies in Washington wilds
Family of Mount Rainier ranger grieves, celebrates his life
The Killing of a Park Ranger on Mount Rainier Reminds Us to Help Returning Soldiers
Lisa Buscani on Benjamin Colton Barnes and the War that isn’t over
The Mt. Rainier Shooting and PTSD: How the Media Got It Wrong
Our Sickening Rush to See PTSD – and What It Costs Vets
How America’s Wars Came Home With the Troops
The Devil on Paradise Road

August: U.S. Department of Defense Casualties Report (2010)

Department of Defense
08/31/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualties: Patrick Durham, 24, and Andrew Castro, 20, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

08/30/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Floyd Holley, 36, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/30/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualties: Ellery Wallace, 33, and Bryn Raver, 20, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

08/30/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualties: Chad Coleman, 20, and Adam Novak, 20, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

08/30/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: James Robinson, 27, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

08/30/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: James Ide, 32, Afghanistan, Sembach, Germany

08/30/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Daniel Fedder, 34, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/29/2010:  DOD Identifies Navy Casualty: James Swink, 20, Afghanistan, II Marine Expeditionary Forces

08/25/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Justin Shoecraft, 28, Afghanistan, Vilseck, Germany

08/24/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Robert Newton, 21, Afghanistan, Twentynine Palms, California

08/24/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Ronald Rodriguez, 26, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/24/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualties: Steven Deluzio, 25, and Tristan Southworth, 21, Afghanistan, Vermont Army National Guard

08/24/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Pedro Millet Meletiche, 20, Afghanistan, Fort Carson, Colorado

08/24/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Jason Calo, 23, Afghanistan, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina

08/24/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Brandon Maggart, 24, Iraq, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington

08/23/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Alexis Maldonado, 20, Afghanistan, Fort Hood, Texas

08/23/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Nathaniel Schultz, 19, Afghanistan, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina

08/23/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Christopher Wright, 23, Afghanistan, Hunter Army Air Field, Georgia

08/21/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Cody Childers, 19, Afghanistan, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina

08/20/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Christopher Boyd, 22, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/20/2010:  DOD Identifies Navy Casualty: Collin Thomas, 33, Afghanistan, east-coast based SEAL team

08/20/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Martin Lugo, 24, Afghanistan, Hunter Army Air Field, Georgia

08/19/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Edgar Roberts, 39, Afghanistan, Georgia Army National Guard

08/19/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Kevin Oratowski, 23, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/18/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualties: Benjamen Chisholm, 24, and Charles High IV, 21, NCDs, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

08/18/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Derek Farley, 24, Afghanistan, Grafenwoehr, Germany

08/17/2010:  Airman Missing In Action From WWII Identified: Ray F. Fletcher, US Army Air Forces

08/17/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Jamal Rhett, 24, Iraq, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii

08/16/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Michael Bock, 26, Afghanistan, Twentynine Palms, California

08/13/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Kristopher Greer, 25, Afghanistan, Marine Forces Reserve, Knoxville, Tennessee

08/13/2010:  Soldier Missing from Korean War Identified: Roy Stewart, US Army

08/12/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Christopher Karch, 23, Afghanistan, Fort Bragg, North Carolina

08/12/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Jose Saenz III, 30, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/11/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: John Andrade, 19, Afghanistan, Vilseck, Germany

08/11/2010:  Soldiers Missing in Action from Vietnam War Identified: Paul G. Magers, US Army

08/09/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Paul Cuzzupe, 23, Afghanistan, Vilseck, Germany

08/09/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualties: Kevin Cornelius, 20, and Vincent Gammone III, 19, Afghanistan, Camp Lejeune, California

08/09/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualties: Andrew Nicol, 23, and Bradley Rappuhn, 24, Afghanistan, Fort Benning, Georgia

08/09/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Faith Hinkley, 23, Iraq, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington

08/09/2010:  DOD Identifies Marine Casualty: Max Donahue, 23, Afghanistan, Camp Pendleton, California

08/02/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Kyle Stout, 25, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

08/01/2010:  DOD Identifies Army Casualty: Michael Stansbery, 21, Afghanistan, Fort Campbell, Kentucky

Related Links:
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2002)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2003)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2004)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2005)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2006)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2007)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2008)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2009)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2011)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2012)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2013)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2014)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2015)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2016)
August: Department of Defense Casualties Report (2017)
Non Combat Deaths of Female Soldiers in the US Military (Iraq)
Non Combat Deaths of Female Soldiers in the US Military (Afghanistan)
Non Combat Deaths of Female Soldiers in the US Military (Other Areas)

Army Spc. Christopher Opat Died of a Non Combat-Related Incident in Baquah, Iraq (June 15, 2010)

opat-older
Spc. Christopher Opat, U.S. Army

Army Spc. Christopher W. Opat, 29, died of a non combat related incident on June 15, 2010 in Baquah, Iraq. Spc. Opat was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom on behalf of the 1st Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington. According to the Department of Defense, at the time of the press release the circumstances surrounding the incident were under investigation.

Related Links:
DOD Identifies Army Casualty
Army Spc. Christopher W. Opat
Cresco soldier dies in Iraq
Local residents show support for fallen soldier
Father of fallen soldier says son was dedicated to service
Christopher Wesley Opat | Remembering the Fallen
Spc. Christopher W. Opat
Christopher Opat, 29, Lime Springs
Procession for fallen Army soldier to go through Spring Valley Tuesday morning
U.S. Army Spc. Christopher Opat laid to rest
A family buries a hero
Flags lowered in Iowa in honor of soldier Christopher Opat
US troops who have died while serving in Iraq and Kuwait

JBLM Army Soldier Nathan Smith Sentenced to 11 Years to Life in Prison for Kidnapping, Rape, Attempted Rape, Torture, and Arson (May 28, 2010)

screen-shot-2016-12-31-at-7-17-36-pm
Nathan Smith, US Army

According to ABC News, US Army Staff Sgt. Nathan Ryan Smith, 29, was charged with kidnapping, rape, arson, and tampering with evidence in the State of Washington. Fort Lewis Army personnel reported that Nathan Smith was Absent Without Leave (AWOL) as of January 5, 2009. Washington state investigators said Smith was suspected of kidnapping and attacking two women.

Smith was accused of grabbing one woman on January 1, 2009 in a Tacoma, Washington parking lot. He allegedly choked her until she became unconscious. The woman claimed when she woke up, she was naked and bound with zip ties in someone’s house. When she tried to free herself, she says she heard a man say, “If you fight, you’ll die.” Then she alleged the man put a knife to her face and said, “If you cooperate, you’ll go home.” According to this victim, the man believed to be Nathan Smith then gagged her and raped her. He also used electrified clamps to torture her and told the woman “If you tell anybody, police or anyone, I will kill you and your family. I can find you. I will find you.”

“After he allegedly raped one woman, Smith told her, I have killed several people in Iraq. I’m crazy in the head, and if I get caught by police I will come looking for you and kill you.” –ABC News

The second victim the police identified was a woman who was kidnapped on January 3, 2009. She claimed once they arrived at the assailant’s home, he choked her until she blacked out. She told police that when she woke up, her hands were bound and she had a gag in her mouth. She managed to escape and ran to a neighbor’s house who called the Washington State police. The second woman gave a similar description as the first victim of the man who kidnapped her. She also identified the same car the first victim identified, the same car Nathan Smith drove.

In both instances the victims said their attacker fit Smith’s description and drove the same kind of car that is registered to Smith. Washington State Police reported that Fort Lewis Army soldier Nathan Smith served as a calvary scout in Iraq from September 2006 to October 2007 and has military and wilderness survival skills. Nathan Smith is considered extremely dangerous. When finally captured and arrested, The News Tribune in Tacoma reported that Smith pleaded not guilty at his arraignment. In 2010, Smith changed his plea to guilty; guilty of one count of second-degree rape, one count of attempted second-degree rape, and one count of first-degree arson. The prosecutor requested 12 years for Smith, adding the brutality he inflicted on the women was off the charts. On May 28, 2010, the Judge sentenced Nathan Smith to 11 years to life in prison and it will be up to the Washington state Indeterminate Sentence Review Board to determine when, if ever, Smith is released.

He apologized to the women before being sentencing, saying he hopes the pain he caused them does not endure. He also apologized to his former comrades in arms. “They’re in Iraq right now, which is where I should be,” said Smith, a former cavalry scout with the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division…Defense attorney Wayne Fricke requested a low-end sentence of nine years, three months, saying his client had served his country honorably before going over the line with the women – prostitutes he’d hired to have sex with him. –The News Tribune

Related Links:
AWOL Soldier Wanted in Kidnappings, Rape
Ex-soldier gets 11 years to life in Parkland sexual assault case
Violent Crime, Suicide & Non Combat Death at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington (US Army)

Army Soldier Adam Winfield Tried to Report War Crimes in Afghanistan But Instead was Charged with War Crimes as Part of ‘The Kill Team’ (2010)

A Stryker unit that went off the rails in Afghanistan, allegedly murdering civilians, threatening a fellow soldier and using drugs
Spc. Adam Winfield, US Army

Learn more: The PBS Documentary ‘The Kill Team’ Nominated for an Emmy

Related Links:
Army Charge Sheets
Sworn Statements
Winfield Charge Sheet
Soldiers charged in Afghan killings
US soldiers charged with murdering civilians in Afghanistan war
Joint Base Lewis-McChord Stryker soldier faces court-martial
Father: Army Ignored Complaints Of Afghan Slayings
Fort Lewis soldier’s father: Army was warned of murder plot
Soldier’s father: Army was warned of murder plot
Facebook Chat of Accused Afghan ‘Kill Team’ Member Made Public
Young Soldier Both Revered and Reviled
Army ‘Kill Team’ Member: ‘We All Said Yes’ to Slaying Afghan Civilian
Third “kill team” defendant asks to get out of jail
Soldier pleads guilty to manslaughter in Afghan’s killing
‘Kill Team’ Soldier Gets Three Years in Prison
Soldier gets 3 years for part he played in deaths of Afghan civilians
Stryker ‘kill team’ trials left some soldiers’ families deeply in debt
The Kill Team: How U.S. Soldiers in Afghanistan Murdered Innocent Civilians
Tribeca Diary: ‘The Kill Team’
‘The Kill Team’: When Your Squad Murders Civilians, What’s a Soldier to Do?
The Kill Team | American War Crimes in Afghanistan
Dan Krauss Investigates the Kill Team
‘The Kill Team’ premieres at Tribeca Film Festival, tells the story of gory murders in Afghanistan
Negative Reviews of ‘The Kill Team’ Miss What Makes the Documentary Special. So Do the Positive Ones
‘Kill Team’: The Documentary the Army Doesn’t Want You to See
“The Kill Team”: When U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan became trophy hunters
The Kill Team is a foggy journey into the heart of darkness
Afghanistan War Movie The Kill Team Is an Absolutely Essential Documentary
Documentary ‘The Kill Team’ Captures Nightmare of War
‘The Kill Team’ provides slanted account of Maywand District murders
The Kill Team Movie: Now on PBS

Screen Shot 2016-08-18 at 3.20.19 PMScreen Shot 2016-08-18 at 3.50.03 PMScreen Shot 2016-08-18 at 3.50.49 PM

JBLM Army Pfc. Adriana Alvarez Died of a Gunshot Wound of an Unexplained Nature Sustained While Supporting Combat Operations in Baghdad, Iraq (February 10, 2010)

Adriana Alvarez
Pfc. Adriana Alvarez, U.S. Army

Army Pfc. Adriana Alvarez, 20, died of injuries sustained while supporting combat operations on February 10, 2010 in Baghdad, Iraq. Pfc. Alvarez was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom on behalf of the 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington. According to the Department of Defense press release, the incident was under investigation yet the outcome of the investigation is unknown. According to the Brownsville Herald, Pfc. Alvarez’s sister indicated that she was found with a gunshot wound. An official cause of death could not be determined based on any official statements from the Army or media reports. Although, the Olympian reported “Pfc. Adriana Alvarez, 20, belonged to a military police company at Lewis-McChord and died from injuries of an unexplained nature…in Baghdad, according to a separate report.”

“The U.S. Army policewoman was found Wednesday in Baghdad with a gunshot wound. Military officials were investigating Alvarez’s death, her sister said.”  –Brownsville Herald (February 12, 2010)

Adriana Alvarez DoD
Click here for DoD press release.

“Army PFC Alvarez was assigned to the 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington. She was found dead of a gunshot wound – under investigation. Adriana always had dreams of becoming a police officer so after she graduated in 2008 from San Benito High School in San Benito, Texas, she joined the Army. She knew the best way to pursue a career in law enforcement would be through the military. In August she deployed to Iraq and kept in touch with her family thru e-mails and phone calls. Two days before her death, she spoke to her sister and said everything was fine. Adriana loved photography, classic rock music and proudly served her country.” (Adriana Alvarez, Find A Grave)

Related Links:
DOD Identifies Army Casualty
Army Pfc. Adriana Alvarez
Pfc. Adriana Alvarez | Find a Grave
Area soldiers die in Iraq, Afghanistan
Female soldier from San Benito dies in Iraq
AT A GLANCE: Valley Servicemen who were killed in war in Iraq
Two Lewis-McChord soldiers killed this week in separate incidents
Violent Crime, Suicide & Non Combat Death at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington
Non Combat Deaths of Female Soldiers in the US Military (Iraq)
List of Washington’s Iraq War dead
Facing Our Losses – Iraq 2010

MJFA on Social:
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/militaryjusticeforall
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/military_crime
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/@military_crime
Email: militaryjusticeforall@gmail.com

Joshua Tabor, US Army, Sentenced to 60 Days for Waterboarding His 4 Year Old Daughter (2010)

Joshua Tabor, US Army

Joshua Tabor, Who Served in Iraq, Accused of Waterboarding Daughter
U.S. soldier Joshua Tabor waterboards his daughter, 4, because she couldn’t recite alphabet: police
Police: Iraq War Vet Joshua Tabor Waterboarded 4-Year-Old Daughter Over ABC’s
U.S. soldier ‘waterboarded his own daughter, 4, because she couldn’t recite alphabet’
Police: Iraq vet abused daughter, held her head in water
Soldier Charged with Water-Torturing Daughter, 4
Army sergeant pleads not guilty to water torturing daughter
Army Sergeant Accused of Abusing Daughter Has Georgia Ties
Army sgt. pleads not guilty in water torture of 4-year-old daughter
Army Sergeant Joshua Tabor was sentenced to 60 days in jail this morning after investigators say he “water boarded” his three-year-old daughter

Sgt Carlos Gill, US Army, Died of a Non Combat-Related Illness, Kandahar Air Field, Afghanistan (2010)

gill_carlos_e_lg
Sgt Carlos Gill, US Army

Sgt Carlos Gill, 25, US Army, died of a non combat related illness at Walter Reed Army Medical Center on January 26, 2010 after being evacuated from Kandahar Air Field, Afghanistan. Sgt. Gill was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom on behalf of the 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry Regiment, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division in Fort Lewis, Washington.

Related Links:
DOD Identifies Army Casualty
Army Sgt. Carlos E. Gill
Gadsden man’s son dies after evacuation from Afghanistan
Remembering three soldiers who served in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam

SSG Calvin Gibbs, US Army (2010)

calvin
SSG Calvin Gibbs, US Army

Related Links:
Army Charge Sheets
Sworn Statements
5 Soldiers Accused Of Setting Up ‘Kill Team’ In Afghanistan
Calvin Gibbs allegedly charged with murder of 3 afghan people
Grisly allegations in war-crimes probe of Army Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs
Trial By Media – The SSgt. Calvin Gibbs Story
Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs harbored dark side
U.S. soldier Calvin Gibbs, accused of killing Afghan civilians for sport, kept victims’ fingers as souvenirs, like ‘antlers off a deer’
Soldier admits taking war trophies, denies murder
Hearing starts in soldier’s ‘thrill kill’ case
‘Kill team’ US platoon commander guilty of Afghan murders
Calvin Gibbs, Leader of ‘Thrill Kill’ Soldiers, Guilty of Murder
Army sergeant found guilty in staged murders of three Afghan civilians
Soldier found guilty of murdering Afghans, sentenced to life
U.S. sergeant who gunned down unarmed Afghan civilians and cut off their fingers as trophies is jailed for life
A question of accountability
The Kill Team: How U.S. Soldiers in Afghanistan Murdered Innocent Civilians
Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs was described by one of his comrades as homicidal, as “evil incarnate”
‘Kill Team’: The Documentary the Army Doesn’t Want You to See
Citing new evidence, convicted Afghan ‘kill team’ mastermind seeks new trial
Convicted U.S. leader of Afghan ‘kill team’ wins a new hearing

Screen Shot 2016-08-18 at 8.17.04 AM

Spc Andrew Holmes, US Army (2010)

NA-STRYKER
Spc. Andrew Holmes, US Army

Related Links:
Army Charge Sheets
Sworn Statements
Pfc. Andrew Holmes, US Army
Mother of accused soldier asks ‘Where was the Army?’
Boise soldier charged with murder in Afghanistan
Army ‘Kill Team’ Member: ‘We All Said Yes’ to Slaying Afghan Civilian
Pfc. Andrew Holmes pleads guilty in Afghan ‘kill team’ case
US soldier pleads guilty to Afghan murder
Army private gets 7 years for murder of unarmed Afghan teen
US soldier jailed for seven years over murders of Afghan civilians
U.S. Army Apologizes For ‘Repugnant’ Photos Of Dead Afghans
US apologises for ‘kill team’ photos of Andrew Holmes and Jeremy Morlock with Afghans
‘Kill team’ trials tested soldiers’ families, left some deeply in debt
Criminal Appeals: Pfc Andrew Holmes, US Army v. United States of America (2010)
Andy Got His Gun: An Idaho Soldier Returns Home After War Crimes Conviction/Sentence
Northwest Soldier Released From Prison Speaks Out
Soldier Who Pleaded Guilty in Afghan ‘Kill Team’ Case Released
Youngest of JBLM’s ‘kill team’ soldiers released from Army prison
Boise soldier who pleaded guilty in Afghan ‘kill team’ case released from prison
‘Good behavior’: US soldier who admitted murdering Afghan civilian gets early release
Former soldier convicted in thrill killing leaves prison
Idaho soldier convicted of ‘thrill killing’ civilians in Afghanistan is released from prison
The Kill Team: How U.S. Soldiers in Afghanistan Murdered Innocent Civilians
‘Kill Team’: The Documentary the Army Doesn’t Want You to See
Documentary ‘The Kill Team’ Captures Nightmare of War
‘Who’s Going to Question It?’: How U.S. Soldiers Murdered Afghan Civilians
What is Life Worth in the United States Army Military Justice System?

Screen Shot 2016-08-18 at 9.02.56 AM