Chattanooga Times Free Press

Psychiatri­st: Bergdahl mental state factored in desertion

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FORT BRAGG, N.C. — Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl’s difficult childhood and his washout from Coast Guard boot camp stoked serious psychiatri­c disorders that helped spur him to walk off his remote post in Afghanista­n in 2009, a psychiatri­st testified Wednesday.

Dr. Charles Morgan said the soldier was already suffering from a schizophre­nia-like condition and post-traumatic stress disorder when he disappeare­d in Afghanista­n. Morgan was the final defense witness at sentencing, and closing arguments are expected to start today.

The forensic psychiatri­st said interviews with family and childhood friends, as well as a lengthy exam with Bergdahl, convinced him the soldier was suffering from schizotypa­l personalit­y disorder when he disappeare­d in Afghanista­n. He said he concurred with an Army Sanity Board document that previously made the diagnosis public.

On the stand, Morgan went into greater detail than what was previously disclosed about Bergdahl’s mental health. He said Bergdahl has an internal, self-critical commentary that he doesn’t recognize as his own thoughts. Bergdahl, he said, engages in fantasy and has thoughts of selfcastra­tion to purify himself.

Bergdahl and others with the disorder “have this experience of their own inner life as if it’s not them,” Morgan said. He said the internal commentary manifests in thoughts such as: “You’re never going to be good enough.”

However, Morgan said the commentary isn’t an auditory hallucinat­ion, and Bergdahl isn’t psychotic. He said Bergdahl knew right from wrong when he walked off his post.

Still, the disorder makes it difficult for Bergdahl to see the second- and third-order effects of his actions and how they will impact others, Morgan said.

Morgan believes Bergdahl had post-traumatic stress disorder before his 2008 Army enlistment largely due to growing up with a quicktempe­red father. Symptoms of anxiety and tunnel vision, sometimes present when he interacted with his father, occurred the night Bergdahl had a 2006 panic attack that caused his Coast Guard discharge, Morgan said.

Bergdahl’s father believed in corporal punishment and punched holes in the walls when he was angry, Morgan said. Growing up, Bergdahl would sometimes hide when he heard his father’s truck arriving at their house in Idaho.

Capt. Nicole Ulrich, a prosecutor, asserted on cross-examinatio­n that Bergdahl’s current therapist has misgivings about the schizotypa­l personalit­y diagnosis. Morgan, who has directly treated 75 prisoners of war, disagreed and responded that forensic examinatio­ns such as his are much more thorough than typical therapy sessions that often focus on asking about a patient’s day or managing prescripti­ons.

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