Los Angeles Times

‘Psychopath’: SEALs decry Gallagher

Shut out of war crimes trial, Iraq veterans get a chance to speak out against Navy officer.

- By Andrew Dyer Dyer writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Navy SEALs who were never called to testify in the war crimes trial of Chief Petty Officer Edward R. Gallagher told naval criminal investigat­ors about behavior they witnessed, including the alleged stabbing of a wounded Islamic State fighter that led to murder charges against Gallagher.

The two SEALs were granted immunity to testify in the trial last summer but were never called to do so.

Their interviews with criminal investigat­ors will be available for streaming Friday on Hulu, on “The Weekly” from the New York Times. It will be broadcast on FX on Sunday at 10 p.m.

The Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service conducted the SEAL interviews more than a year before the court-martial of Gallagher, who was charged and acquitted of several war crimes counts, including murder.

One of those SEALs — Petty Officer 2nd Class Ivan Villanueva — told investigat­ors he witnessed the stabbing of a wounded Islamic State fighter that led to murder charges against Gallagher.

“I saw it happen,” Villanueva says during his interview.

The Navy has never explained why Villanueva was not called to testify at Gallagher’s court-martial, and did not respond to inquiries on Thursday.

The case created a national firestorm as President Trump intervened again and again on Gallagher’s behalf — and culminated this week with a visit by Gallagher and his wife, Andrea, with Trump and First Lady Melania Trump at the president’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

Trump and other supporters say “warfighter­s” don’t need their actions questioned by bureaucrat­s in the military.

While the accounts of the witnesses aren’t new — the San Diego Union-Tribune published a summary of their stories on the eve of trial — hearing those accounts from the witnesses themselves is.

The episode, titled “The Gallagher Effect,” presents these SEALs’ stories in their own words and voices, framing their actions as courageous­ly going against the traditiona­l brotherhoo­d of the Navy SEALs.

In separate interviews, the SEALs tell NCIS agents that Gallagher behaved like a “psychopath” during their 2017 deployment to Mosul, Iraq, where the platoon took on Islamic State. One by one, his men tell NCIS that their platoon served as Gallagher’s “personal sniper escort” and that the chief was “medal chasing.”

They also describe his actions during the deployment as war crimes.

“I saw Eddie take a shot at probably a 12-year-old kid,” one says.

Three SEALs tell investigat­ors they saw Gallagher stab a wounded Islamic State fighter in the neck.

These interviews led to the murder charges against Gallagher in 2019 — charges the SEAL denied. He was found not guilty in July of murdering the wounded fighter and shooting civilians. Gallagher says his men made up the accusation­s because they were unhappy with his leadership style.

In a written statement sent via his attorney, Gallagher said: “My first reaction to seeing the videos was surprise and disgust that they would make up blatant lies about me, but I quickly realized that they were scared that the truth would come out of how cowardly they acted on deployment. Soon after I got to the brig at Miramar, one of these guys came to visit me and apologize for what they did but that they had to stick with the fake stories or be charged with making false statements.”

Gallagher’s attorney, Tim Parlatore, told the Union-Tribune in an interview Thursday that there was nothing new in the videos and predicted the New York Times would edit and cherry-pick which parts of the statements to air.

“You’re never going to understand these interviews without a trained criminal investigat­or looking at it,” Parlatore said. “Those videos were so helpful to me — they gave me a road map to acquittal.”

According to Parlatore, the full videos revealed flawed NCIS interrogat­ions that were key to his trial preparatio­n.

“No question, these videos demonstrat­e all of the failings of the investigat­ion,” Parlatore said. “They were fantastic — very rarely in a case do you have something as great as these videos to help you prepare.”

One witness in the videos is Corey Scott, a petty officer 1st class who, along with Gallagher, was treating the wounded Islamic State fighter’s injuries after he was wounded in an airstrike. Part of the medical treatment involved inserting a breathing tube into the man to treat what witnesses said was “blast lung.”

Scott told NCIS in his interview that he saw Gallagher stab the fighter multiple times and that he remained with the man until he died. At trial, however, Scott told a different version of his story — one in which he says he killed the fighter after Gallagher stabbed him just once.

In court, Scott said that after Gallagher stabbed the fighter, Scott suffocated him by covering his breathing tube.

Audio of Scott’s courtmarti­al testimony — and his startling admission — is included in “The Weekly.”

Parlatore said he knew Scott wasn’t telling the whole story during a preliminar­y interview when Scott told him the fighter had suffocated.

“His lawyer shut me down” during that interview, Parlatore said. “He wouldn’t let me ask [more questions] until they worked out the immunity issue.”

Also included in the videos are statements by Villanueva and another witness, Petty Officer 1st Class Joe Arrington. Both were granted immunity to testify, but prosecutor­s never called them to the stand.

According to Navy investigat­ion records, Arrington saw Gallagher shoot civilians. Villanueva told investigat­ors he saw Gallagher stab the wounded Islamic State fighter.

Arrington, Villanueva and Scott all share the same attorney, Brian Ferguson. After Scott’s testimony, prosecutor­s appeared to change course in the trial and did not call Villanueva or Arrington to the stand.

A Navy prosecutor at the time declined to answer a Union-Tribune question about why Villanueva — who told investigat­ors he saw the stabbing — was never called to testify.

Ferguson declined to comment.

The case gained renewed importance in November, when Trump intervened and granted Gallagher clemency, restoring his rank to chief petty officer and undoing a rank reduction ordered by a military jury.

Although the jury acquitted Gallagher of the most serious charges against him, it found him guilty of posing for a photo with the corpse of the Islamic State fighter he was accused of killing.

After Trump restored Gallagher’s rank, the Navy moved to strip Gallagher of his SEAL trident and boot him from the elite community. The president pushed back in Gallagher’s favor and, before all was said and done, Navy Secretary Richard V. Spencer lost his job over his handling of the case.

Gallagher retired from the Navy in November.

“The Weekly” also delves into Gallagher’s activity on social media after he was accused. Gallagher has lashed out at his perceived enemies, including Navy prosecutor­s, Navy Special Warfare Commander Rear Adm. Collin Green and the witnesses who turned him in, who he and some supporters refer to as the “Mean Girls.”

One SEAL who testified against Gallagher told the Union-Tribune on Tuesday he is frustrated that Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Alpine) and Trump got involved in the case.

“When you look at politician­s getting involved in military justice — whether it’s a congressma­n from San Diego or the president — with their involvemen­t, it isn’t justice,” the witness said. “It’s political, when shooting civilians and executing prisoners shouldn’t be.”

The witness spoke to the Union-Tribune on condition of anonymity, saying he still fears for his safety.

 ?? Sandy Huffaker Getty Images ?? NAVY SEAL Edward R. Gallagher was convicted of taking a photo with an Islamic State fighter’s corpse.
Sandy Huffaker Getty Images NAVY SEAL Edward R. Gallagher was convicted of taking a photo with an Islamic State fighter’s corpse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States