Yuma Sun

Jordan releases security footage of shooting

Video shows 3 U.S. troops being killed by soldier

- Competitiv­enPricing Freenin-homenconsu­ltations

LAKE HAVASU CITY — Authoritie­s say life jackets are essential for anyone on a boat regardless of age following the drowning deaths of two people in Lake Havasu.

The Arizona Game and Fish Department says 41-year-old Esmeralda Gonzalez and 44-year-old Raul Gonzalez of Monrovia, California, died Friday after jumping into the water without life jackets.

The department says Arizona law only requires kids 12 and under to wear life jackets but everyone who gets on a boat should wear them anyway.

Authoritie­s say the woman jumped into the water and began to panic. Her husband jumped in to help but was also seen struggling in the water. Their bodies were found shortly after. Local authoritie­s say alcohol may have been a factor.

AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan’s military released security camera footage Monday of a shooting in which a Jordanian soldier killed three U.S. military trainers at an air base in the kingdom.

The video had previously been shown to the families of the U.S. Army Green Berets by U.S. law enforcemen­t but had not been made public until Monday.

The soldiers were killed Nov. 4 when their convoy came under fire at the entrance to the al-Jafr base in southern Jordan.

A Jordanian military court sentenced the soldier, 1st Sgt. Marik al-Tuwayha, to life in prison with hard labor last week.

The defendant had said he opened fire because he feared the base was coming under attack and that he had acted in line with openfire regulation­s.

Jordan’s military said in a statement Monday that the soldier “had acted against orders and military instructio­ns and had not acted in self-defense.”

The statement was posted by Hala Akhbar, a news site linked to the military that also released the security camera footage.

Jordan initially said the Americans triggered the shooting by disobeying entry rules, a claim that was later withdrawn.

The victims of the shooting were 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.

The 6-minute-long video was in line with descriptio­ns previously given by the relatives of the American soldiers who had watched the footage.

It shows the U.S. convoy coming under fire at the entrance to the base. The footage has no sound, but puffs of white-gray smoke indicate gunfire.

At one point, two figures, U.S. forces, are seen getting out of their vehicles to take cover. They raise their hands and wave from behind a barrier, but the shooting continues. Another figure, according to past descriptio­ns the Jordanian, chases them and keeps shooting.

According to the descriptio­ns of the relatives, Lewellen and McEnroe, who were in the first vehicle waiting at the gate, were the first to be hit by gunfire.

Moriarty and another soldier jumped out of the next two cars to take cover and returned fire with their pistols. They yelled that they were friendly forces, the relatives said. The defendant kept shooting, they said. He was seriously wounded in the exchange.

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