Soldier faces hearing at Afghan base over suicide

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KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — An American soldier charged
with abuse that led to the suicide of a 19-year-old fellow soldier in
Afghanistan is facing a preliminary hearing Sunday on a base in the
country, the military said.
The hearing came as two more members
of the international force in Afghanistan died of what NATO described as
"non-battle-related" injuries.
Spc. Ryan J. Offutt is charged
with offenses including maltreatment, involuntary manslaughter and
negligent homicide in the death of Pvt. Danny Chen, the military
statement said. Offutt is one of eight infantrymen charged in connection
with the suicide.
Chen shot himself in a guardhouse Oct. 3 in
Afghanistan after what investigators say were weeks of racial slurs,
humiliation and physical abuse.
Offutt, 32, of Greenville, Pa. was
charged in December along with seven others in the same unit. He joined
the Army in 2006 and served 14 months in Iraq before being deployed to
Afghanistan. An attorney for Offutt could not immediately be contacted.
Chen, a native New Yorker of Chinese descent, had only been in Afghanistan for two months when he killed
himself.
He had told relatives he endured weeks of racial teasing and name calling while in training in the U.S.

After
arriving in Afghanistan, investigators said Chen was subjected to
hazing by members of his unit, the 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry
Regiment, 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division based
in Fort Wainwright, Alaska.
Chen’s family has said investigators
told them that at a remote base in southern Afghanistan, he was
subjected to racial slurs and forced to do excessive sit-ups, push-ups,
runs and sprints carrying sandbags.
On the day of his death, he
had reported to the guard tower without his helmet or adequate water and
was forced to crawl about 100 yards (100 meters) across gravel carrying
his equipment as his comrades threw rocks at him, a family
representative has quoted investigators as saying.
Sunday’s hearing under Article 32 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice will determine whether Offutt
faces court-martial.
The
two most serious charges, involuntary manslaughter and negligent
homicide, carry prison sentences of up to 10 years and three years,
respectively.
The hearing is being held at Kandahar Air Field, the sprawling base for U.S. and NATO operations in the
south.
Chen’s
family and Chinese community members in New York have called for legal
proceedings related to his death to be held in the United States, so
they could witness them.
Offutt’s mother, Carol Tate of Sharon,
Pa., told The (Sharon) Herald last month that she has spoken to her son
and thought there were other factors that have not been made public, but
she declined further comment.
The Army has identified the other
soldiers charged as 1st Lt. Daniel J. Schwartz, 25, of Maryland (no
hometown was given); Staff Sgt. Blaine G. Dugas, 35, of Port Arthur,
Texas; Staff Sgt. Andrew J. Van Bockel, 26, of Aberdeen, S.D.; Sgt. Adam
M. Holcomb, 29, of Youngstown, Ohio; Sgt. Jeffrey T. Hurst, 26, of
Brooklyn, Iowa; Spc. Thomas P. Curtis, 25, of Hendersonville, Tenn; and
Sgt. Travis F. Carden, 24, of Fowler, Ind.
VanBockel, Holcomb,
Hurst, Curtis and Offutt were charged with the most serious offenses,
including involuntary manslaughter, negligent homicide, and assault and
battery.
The NATO-led force also said two service members in southern Afghanistan died Sunday of injuries that
were not battle-related.
A
coalition statement did not say whether the injuries were the result of
an accident, suicide, or other causes and it did not give the troops’
nationalities.
Sunday’s deaths bring to 16 the number of coalition troops who have died in Afghanistan this month.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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