The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jordanian gets life for deaths of 3 U.S. troops

Americans’ families: Conviction is only a ‘good first step.’

- By Reem Saad and Omar Akour

AMMAN, JORDAN — A Jordanian soldier was sentenced Monday to life in prison after being convicted of killing three U.S. military trainers last year, but some said questions lingered about his motive for the shooting at a Jordanian air base.

Jordan has ruled out terrorism in the November shooting in which the convoy of the U.S. Army Green Berets came under fire at the base entrance.

The defendant has said he felt no animosity toward Americans and opened fire because he believed the base was coming under attack.

However, relatives of the slain U.S. troops have described security camera footage that they say shows him shooting for six minutes, reloading and aiming at the Americans, even as they identify themselves as friendly forces.

After a “not guilty” plea, the Jordanian soldier, 1st Sgt. Marik al-Tuwayha, was tried by a military court in Jordan’s capital of Amman for the killings of Staff Sgt. Matthew C. Lewellen, 27, of Kirksville, Missouri; Staff Sgt. Kevin J. McEnroe, 30, of Tucson, Arizona; and Staff Sgt. James F. Moriarty, 27, of Kerrville, Texas.

During the monthlong trial, he watched the proceeding­s silently from a cage in the courtroom.

He did not react Monday when the judge announced the verdict and the maximum possible sentence, life in prison with hard labor. When he was led out of the cage, he said: “I have all the respect for the king, but I was doing my job.”

Relatives of two of the U.S. soldiers sat quietly as the judge read the ruling.

Charles Lewellen, 53, whose son was killed, later told The Associated Press that the verdict “won’t take the pain away,” but that it proved “what we have been saying all along ... that he murdered our sons.”

Some of the relatives criticized Jordan’s handling of the case and said the defendant should have received the death penalty. Jordan allows the death penalty, but it is usually handed down in terrorism cases or in a murder coupled with another crime.

The Americans were killed Nov. 4, as their convoy waited at the gate to the al-Jafr base in southern Jordan. Jordan initially said the Americans triggered the shooting by disobeying entry rules, a claim that was later withdrawn.

The trial “confirmed that the deceased U.S. service members followed all establishe­d procedures when accessing the base the day of the incident, as we have noted before,” the U.S. Embassy in Jordan said. “We are reassured to see the perpetrato­r brought to justice.”

Jordan is a member of a U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State group extremists in neighborin­g Syria and Iraq. Jordan hosts troops, including trainers, from the U.S. and other countries as part of the anti-IS battle.

“We are pleased to see that the perpetrato­rs have been brought to justice,” said U.S. Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman. He said the U.S. respects Jordan’s military process and praised Jordan for adhering to its own laws in resolving the case expeditiou­sly.

Davis wouldn’t comment on possible motives for the killing.

At the trial, al-Tuwayha and some of the gate guards testified they heard what might have been a pistol shot coming from the direction of the U.S. convoy. Al-Tuwayha said he opened fire because he feared the base was under attack. Other guards said they held their fire because they couldn’t determine the source of the sound.

Al-Tuwayha has said he had “no intention of killing anyone” and felt no resentment toward Americans.

According to the surveillan­ce video described by the relatives, Lewellen and McEnroe were the first to be hit by gunfire. Moriarty and another soldier jumped out of their cars to take cover and returned fire from their pistols, according to the descriptio­ns of the video. They yelled that they were friendly forces, the relatives said.

The defendant kept shooting, they said. He was seriously wounded in the exchange.

The video was shown to the family by U.S. law enforcemen­t, but has not been released to the public. Some of the relatives have questioned why the video was not screened at the trial and why the court did not ask a surviving U.S. soldier to testify, despite what they said was his willingnes­s to do so.

Moriarty’s father, Jim, wrote in a letter Monday to the Jordanian Embassy in the U.S. that the “successful prosecutio­n” was a “good first step, but it is only the first step.”

In the letter, a copy of which was given to the Associated Press, Moriarty listed several demands to Jordan.

These included allowing the defendant to be re-interviewe­d by the FBI about his motive and releasing the security video to the families.

Moriarty, a lawyer, said the video had been entered into evidence at the trial.

 ?? REEM SAAD / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Charles and Cynthia Lewellen meet with reporters in Amman, Jordan, Monday. A Jordanian soldier killed their son and two others last year.
REEM SAAD / ASSOCIATED PRESS Charles and Cynthia Lewellen meet with reporters in Amman, Jordan, Monday. A Jordanian soldier killed their son and two others last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States