Cape Breton Post

Ernest Medina, key figure in My Lai Massacre, dies at 81

- BY IVAN MORENO

Former Army Capt. Ernest L. Medina, a key figure in the My Lai Massacre during the Vietnam War, has died in Wisconsin. He was 81.

Medina was an Army captain on March 16, 1968, when American troops under his command killed hundreds of unarmed Vietnamese civilians. He was acquitted in a court-martial over the massacre.

Medina died May 8, according to an obituary written by his family. No cause of death was given. He was being buried Monday.

Medina was captain of Charlie Company whose mission was to attack a crack Vietcong unit. The intelligen­ce soldiers received was inaccurate and they encountere­d no resistance in the village of My Lai and a neighbouri­ng community. Charlie Company killed 504 villagers in just three to four hours, most of them women, children and elderly men.

It wasn’t until more than a year later that news of the massacre became public.

Medina was accused of responsibi­lity in the deaths of at least 182 civilians. Medina, whose platoon took up a position in reserve outside the village, said during his trial that he was not with the soldiers when the massacre happened and that he didn’t know about it until it was over. Medina acknowledg­ed killing one woman, but said he believed she was about to attack him. Lt. William L. Calley Jr., who led the first platoon into My Lai, was the only one convicted of the 25 men originally charged in the massacre.

In a 1988 interview with The Associated Press, Medina looked back on My Lai as a “horrendous thing” that never should have happened.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada