On
this date, November 5, 2009, a mass murder occurred at Fort Hood, Texas where
13 people were shot dead. I will post the information from Wikipedia and go to the Unit 1012 Blog to hear from the
victims’ families.
Location
|
Fort Hood, Texas, U.S.
|
Coordinates
|
31°8′33″N 97°47′47″W
|
Date
|
November 5, 2009
c. 1:34 p.m.-c. 1:44 p.m. (CST) |
Attack type
|
Mass murder
|
Weapon(s)
|
|
Deaths
|
13
|
Injured (non-fatal)
|
30+
|
Perpetrator
|
Major Nidal Malik Hasan
|
Motive
|
Jihad
|
Map of Bell County Texas highlighting Fort Hood CDP |
The Fort Hood shooting was a jihadist mass murder that took place on November 5, 2009, at Fort Hood near Killeen, Texas. Nidal Malik Hasan, a U.S. Army major and psychiatrist, fatally shot 13 people and injured more than 30 others. It is the worst shooting ever to take place on an American military base. Several individuals, including Senator Joe Lieberman, General Barry McCaffrey, and others have called the event a terrorist attack. The United States Department of Defense and federal law enforcement agencies have classified the shootings as an act of workplace violence.
Hasan
was shot and as a result is paralyzed from the waist down. Hasan was arraigned
by a military court on July 20, 2011 and was charged with 13 counts of
premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted murder under the Uniform Code of
Military Justice. His court-martial began on August 7, 2013. If convicted, due
to the nature of the charges (more than one premeditated, or first-degree,
murder case, in a single crime), he would have either been given the death
penalty or life in prison without parole. Hasan was found guilty on all 13
counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder on
August 23, 2013, and was sentenced to death on August 28, 2013.
Days
after the shooting, reports in the media revealed that a Joint Terrorism Task
Force had been aware of e-mail communications between Hasan and the Yemen-based
cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who had been monitored by the NSA as a security threat,
and that Hasan's colleagues had been aware of his increasing radicalization for
several years. The failure to prevent the shootings led the Defense Department
and the FBI to commission investigations, and for Congress to hold hearings.
The
U.S. Government has declined requests from survivors and family members of the
slain to categorize the Fort Hood shooting as act of terrorism, or motivated by
militant Islamic religious convictions. In November 2011, a group of survivors
and family members filed a lawsuit against the government for negligence in
preventing the attack, and to force the government to classify the shootings as
terrorism. The Pentagon has argued that charging Hasan with terrorism is not
possible within military justice and that even having the government classify
the shootings as terrorism would harm the ability of the military prosecutors
to sustain a guilty verdict against Hasan.
Shootings
Preparations
According
to pretrial testimony, Hasan entered the Guns Galore store in Killeen on
July 31, 2009, and purchased the FN Five-seven semi-automatic pistol that he
was to use in the attack at Fort Hood. According to Army Specialist William
Gilbert, a regular customer at the store, Hasan entered the store and asked for
"the most technologically advanced weapon on the market and the one with
the highest standard magazine capacity." Hasan was allegedly asked how he
intended to use the weapon, but simply repeated that he wanted the most
advanced handgun with the largest magazine capacity. The three people with
Hasan—Gilbert, the store manager, and an employee—all recommended the FN
Five-seven pistol. As Gilbert owned one of the pistols, he spent an hour
describing its operation to Hasan.
Hasan
left the store, saying he needed to research the weapon. He returned to
purchase the gun the next day, and visited the store once a week to buy extra
magazines, along with hundreds of rounds of 5.7×28mm SS192 and SS197SR
ammunition. In the weeks prior to the attack, Hasan visited an outdoor shooting
range in Florence, where he allegedly became adept at hitting silhouette
targets at distances of up to 100 yards.
An FN
Five-seven pistol similar to that used by Hasan
|
Soldier
Readiness Processing Center shootings
At
approximately 1:34 p.m. local time Hasan entered his workplace, the Soldier
Readiness Processing Center, where personnel receive routine medical treatment
immediately prior to and on return from deployment. He was armed with the FN
Five-seven pistol, which he had fitted with two Lasermax laser sights: one red,
and one green. A Smith & Wesson .357 Magnum revolver (an older model) was
later found on Hasan's person, but he did not use it to shoot any of the
victims.
According
to eyewitnesses, Hasan had taken a seat at an empty table and bowed his head
for several seconds when he suddenly stood up, shouted "Allahu Akbar!"
and opened fire. Witnesses said Hasan initially "sprayed bullets at
soldiers in a fanlike motion" before taking aim at individual soldiers.
Eyewitness Sgt. Michael Davis said: "The rate of fire was pretty much
constant shooting. When I initially heard it, it sounded like an M16."
Army
reserve Captain John Gaffaney tried to stop Hasan by charging him, but was
mortally wounded before reaching him. Civilian physician assistant Michael
Cahill also tried to charge Hasan with a chair, but was shot and killed. Army
reserve Specialist Logan Burnett tried to stop Hasan by throwing a folding
table at him, but he was shot in the left hip, fell down, and crawled to a
nearby cubicle.
According
to testimony from witnesses, Hasan passed up several opportunities to shoot
civilians, and instead targeted soldiers in uniform, who were not carrying
personal firearms in accordance with military policy. At one point, Hasan
reportedly approached a group of five civilians hiding under a desk. He looked
at them, swept the dot of his pistol's laser sight over one of the men's faces,
and turned away without firing.
Base
civilian police Sergeant Kimberly Munley, who had rushed to the scene in her
patrol car, encountered Hasan in the area outside the Soldier Readiness
Processing Center. Hasan fired at Munley, who exchanged shots with him using
her 9mm M9 pistol. Munley's hand was hit by shrapnel when one of Hasan's
bullets struck a nearby rain gutter, and then two bullets struck Munley: the
first bullet hit her thigh, and the second hit her knee. As she began to fall
from the first bullet, the second bullet struck her femur, shattering it and
knocking her to the ground. Hasan walked up to Munley and kicked her pistol out
of reach.
As
the shooting continued outside, nurses and medics entered the building, secured
the doors with a belt and rushed to help the wounded. According to the
responding nurses, there was so much blood covering the floor inside the
building, that they were unable to maintain balance, and had difficulty
reaching the wounded to help them. In the area outside the building, Hasan
continued to shoot at fleeing soldiers, and civilian police Sergeant Mark Todd
arrived and shouted commands at Hasan to surrender. Todd said: "Then he
turned and fired a couple of rounds at me. I didn't hear him say a word, he
just turned and fired." The two exchanged shots, and Hasan was felled by
five shots from Todd, who kicked the pistol out of his hand and put handcuffs
on him as he fell unconscious.
Map of Fort Hood, with a red dot marking the Soldier Readiness Processing Center |
A shooting victim being transported to a
waiting ambulance
|
Aftermath
An
investigator later testified that 146 spent shell casings were recovered inside
the building. Another 68 casings were collected outside, for a total of 214
rounds fired by the attacker and responding police officers. A medic who
treated Hasan said his pockets were full of pistol magazines. When the shooting
ended, he was still carrying 177 rounds of unfired ammunition in his pockets,
contained in both 20- and 30-round magazines. The incident, which lasted about
10 minutes, resulted in 13 killed—12 soldiers and one civilian; 11 died at the
scene, and two died later in a hospital; and 30 people wounded.
Initially,
officials thought three soldiers were involved in the shooting; two other
soldiers were detained, but subsequently released. The Fort Hood website posted
a notice indicating that the shooting was not a drill. Immediately after the
shooting, the base and surrounding areas were locked down by military police
and U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID) until around 7 pm local
time. In addition, Texas Rangers, Texas DPS troopers, deputies from the Bell
County Sheriff's Office, and FBI agents from Austin and Waco were dispatched to
the base.
US President Barack Obama was briefed on the incident and later made a
statement about the shooting.
On
November 5, 2010, one year later, 52 individuals received awards for their
actions in the shooting. The Soldier's Medal was awarded to 10 soldiers,
including Captain John Gaffaney, who died trying to charge the shooter. The
Secretary of the Army Award for Valor was awarded to police officers Kimberly
Munley and Mark Todd, for the roles they played in stopping the shooter. On May
23, 2011, the Army Award for Valor was posthumously awarded to the civilian
physician assistant Michael Cahill, who died trying to charge the shooter with
a chair.
In May 2012, Senator Joe Lieberman and Representative Peter T. King proposed
legislation that would make the victims of the shooting eligible for the Purple
Heart. In the 113th Congress, Representative John Carter introduced legislation
to change the shooting designation from "workplace violence" to
"combat related" which would make the victims of the shooting
eligible to receive full benefits and the Purple Heart.
First responders prepare the wounded for
transport in waiting ambulances outside Fort Hood's Soldier Readiness
Processing Center Nov. 5. (U.S. Army photo/Jeramie Sivley)
|
Casualties
Thirteen
people were slain in the attack. Over thirty people were wounded; some from
gunshots, others from falls or other injuries incurred during the incident, and
many suffered psychological trauma or shock. The Army, press, and investigative
bodies have reported several numbers for the total number of injured, without
indicating what sorts of injuries they were counting, nor how: 29; 30; 31; 32;
38; and 42. Fort Hood is the most populous U.S. military installation in the
world.
Hasan,
the gunman, was taken to Scott and White Memorial Hospital, a trauma center in
Temple, Texas, and later moved to Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio,
Texas, where he was held under heavy guard. Hasan was hit by at least four
shots. As a result of bullet wounds to his spine, he is now paraplegic. He was
later held at the Bell County jail in Belton, Texas.
Ten
of the injured were also treated at Scott and White. Seven wounded victims were
taken to Metroplex Adventist Hospital in Killeen. Eight others received
hospital treatment for shock. On November 20, 2009, it was announced that eight
of the wounded service members would deploy overseas.
Fatalities
The
13 killed were:
Name
|
Age
|
Hometown
|
Rank/occupation
|
Notes
|
Michael
Grant Cahill[70]
|
62
|
Civilian
Physician Assistant
|
Shot
while trying to charge the shooter[53]
|
|
Libardo
Eduardo Caraveo[71]
|
52
|
|||
32
|
Shot
in the chest
|
|||
John
P. Gaffaney[74]
|
56
|
Shot
while trying to charge the shooter[28]
|
||
Frederick
Greene[70]
|
29
|
Shot
while trying to charge the shooter[76]
|
||
22
|
Specialist
|
Shot
in the back
|
||
29
|
Shot
in the chest
|
|||
19
|
Shot
in the chest
|
|||
22
|
Private
First Class
|
Shot
in the chest
|
||
Russell
Gilbert Seager[81]
|
51
|
Captain[82]
|
||
21
|
Private
First Class
|
Shot
in the chest. Was pregnant when killed, and the baby also died.[85]
|
||
55
|
Shot
in the abdomen
|
|||
23
|
Private
First Class
|
Shot
in the head
|
Gunshot
wounds
The
following people suffered gunshot wounds and survived:
Count
|
Name
|
Rank/occupation
|
Notes
|
1
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the leg
|
|
2
|
Sgt. Patrick Blue III[91]
|
Sergeant
|
Not shot, but hit in the side by bullet fragments
|
3
|
Specialist
|
||
4
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the hip, left elbow, and hand
|
|
5
|
Alan Carroll[92]
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the upper right arm, right bicep, left side of
back, and left leg
|
6
|
Captain
|
Shot in the hip and stomach, and grazed in the forehead
|
|
7
|
Joy Clark[93]
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Shot in the forearm
|
8
|
Specialist
|
||
9
|
Chad Davis[95]
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Shot in the shoulder
|
10
|
Private
|
Shot in the shoulder and grazed in the neck
|
|
11
|
Private
|
Shot in the hip
|
|
12
|
Private
|
||
13
|
Sergeant
|
Shot twice in the leg
|
|
14
|
Alvin Howard[89]
|
Sergeant
|
Shot in the left shoulder
|
15
|
Private
|
Shot once in the knee and twice in the back
|
|
16
|
Eric Williams Jackson[99]
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Shot in the right arm
|
17
|
Private
|
Shot once in the foot and twice in the back
|
|
18
|
Staff Sergeant
|
||
19
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Grazed in the lower right side, and shot in the left
upper chest, left back, lower right thigh, upper right thigh, and right foot
|
|
20
|
Paul Martin[93]
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Shot in the arm, leg, and back
|
21
|
Brandy Mason[92]
|
2nd Lieutenant
|
Shot in the hip
|
22
|
Grant Moxon[91]
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the thigh
|
23
|
Civilian Police Sergeant
|
Shot twice in the leg
|
|
24
|
John Pagel[102]
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the chest
|
25
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the arm, shoulder, and thigh
|
|
26
|
Chief Warrant Officer
|
Started a nonprofit foundation called "32 Still
Standing" to raise money to support the survivors.[104]
|
|
27
|
Randy Royer[105]
|
Major
|
Shot in the arm and leg
|
28
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the chest, back
|
|
29
|
Specialist
|
Shot in the shoulder
|
|
30
|
Patrick Zeigler[93]
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Shot in the left shoulder, left forearm, left hip, and
left side of head
|
31
|
Sergeant
|
Shot in the right thigh and left hip
|
|
32
|
Thuan Nguyen[99]
|
Staff Sergeant
|
Shot in the thigh
|
U.S. Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan, named as the
shooter in the November 5, 2009 Fort Hood mass shooting. Photograph released by
the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
At the time of the photo, Hasan was a Captain.
|
Shooter
Main
article: Nidal Malik Hasan
During
his court-martial on August 6, 2013 before a panel of 13 officers, Major Nidal
Malik Hasan declared that he was the shooter. Hasan is unmarried and was
described as socially isolated. Born in the United States, Hasan is a
practicing Muslim who, according to one of his cousins, became more devout
after the deaths of his parents in 1998 and 2001. His cousin did not recall him
ever expressing radical or anti-American
views. Another cousin, Nader Hasan, a lawyer in Virginia, said that Nidal
Hasan's opinion turned against the United States wars in the Mideast after he
heard stories from his patients, who had returned from fighting in Afghanistan
and Iraq. Because of what Hasan said was discrimination and his deepening anguish
about serving in a military that fought against Muslims, he told some members
of his family that he wanted to leave the military. He said that he could not,
but he may have been given inappropriate advice.
From
2003 to 2009, Hasan was stationed at Walter Reed Medical Center for his
internship and residency; he also had a two-year fellowship at USUHS completed
in 2009. According to National Public Radio (NPR), officials at Walter Reed
Medical Center repeatedly expressed concern about Hasan's behavior during the
entire six years he was there; Hasan's supervisors gave him poor evaluations
and warned him that he was doing substandard work. In early 2008 (and on later
occasions), several key officials met to discuss what to do about Hasan.
Attendees of these meetings reportedly included the Walter Reed chief of
psychiatry, the chairman of the USUHS Psychiatry Department, two assistant
chairs of the USUHS Psychiatry Department (one of whom was the director of
Hasan's psychiatry fellowship), another psychiatrist, and the director of the
Walter Reed psychiatric residency program. According to NPR, fellow students
and faculty were "deeply troubled" by Hasan's behavior, which they
described as "disconnected", "aloof", "paranoid",
"belligerent" and "schizoid".
Once,
while presenting what was supposed to be a medical lecture to other
psychiatrists, Hasan talked about Islam, and said that, according to the Koran,
non-believers would be sent to hell, decapitated, set on fire, and have burning
oil poured down their throats. A Muslim psychiatrist in the audience raised his
hand, and challenged Hasan's claims. According to the Associated Press, Hasan's
lecture also "justified suicide bombings." In the summer of 2009,
after completion of his programs, he was transferred to Fort Hood.
At
Fort Hood, Hasan rented an apartment away from other officers, in a somewhat
rundown area. Two days before the shooting, Hasan gave away furniture from his
home, saying he was going to be deployed. He also handed out copies of the
Qur'an, along with his business cards, which listed a Maryland phone number and
read "Behavioral Heatlh [sic] – Mental Health – Life Skills | Nidal Hasan, MD, MPH |
SoA(SWT) | Psychiatrist". According to investigators, the acronym
"SoA" is commonly used on jihadist websites as an acronym for
"Soldier of Allah" or "Servant of Allah", and SWT is
commonly used by Muslims to mean "subhanahu wa ta'ala"
(literally, "glory to him"; used after God's name). The cards did not
reflect his military rank.
In
May 2001, Hasan attended the funeral of his mother, held at the Dar Al-Hijrah
mosque in Falls Church, Virginia, which has 3,000 members. He may also have
occasionally prayed there but, for a period of ten years, he prayed several
times a week at the Muslim Community Center in Silver Spring, Maryland, closer
to where he lived and worked. He was regularly seen there by the imam and other
members. His attendance at the Falls Church mosque was in the same period as
that of Nawaf al-Hazmi and Hani Hanjour, two of the hijackers in the September
11 attacks, who went there from April 2001 to later in the summer. A law
enforcement official said that the FBI will probably look into whether Hasan
associated with the hijackers. A review of Hasan's computer and his multiple
e-mail accounts has revealed visits to websites espousing radical Islamist
ideas, a senior law enforcement official said.
Hasan
expressed admiration for the teachings of Anwar al-Awlaki, the imam at the Dar
al-Hijrah mosque in Falls Church, Virginia between 2000 and 2002. Awlaki had
been the subject of several FBI investigations, and had helped hijackers
al-Hazmi and Hanjour settle, and provided spiritual guidance to them when they
met him at the San Diego mosque, and after they drove to the east coast.
Considered moderate then, Al-Awlaki appeared to become radicalized after 2006
and was under surveillance. After Hasan wrote nearly 20 emails to him between
December 2008 and June 2009, Hasan was investigated by the FBI. The fact that
Hasan had "certain communications" with the subject of a Joint
Terrorism Task Force investigation was revealed in an FBI press release made on
November 9, 2009, and reporting by the media immediately revealed that the subject
was Awlaki and the communications were emails. In one, Hasan wrote: "I
can't wait to join you" in the afterlife. Lt. Col. Tony Shaffer, a
military analyst at the Center for Advanced Defense Studies, suggested that
Hasan was "either offering himself up or [had] already crossed that line
in his own mind." Hasan asked al-Awlaki when jihad is appropriate, and
whether it is permissible if innocents are killed in a suicide attack.
Army
employees were informed of the contacts at the time, but they believed that the
emails were consistent with Hasan's professional mental health research about
Muslims in the armed services, as part of his master's work in Disaster and
Preventive Psychiatry. A DC-based joint terrorism task force operating under
the FBI was notified, and the information reviewed by one of its Defense
Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS) employees, who concluded there was not
sufficient information for a larger investigation. Higher-ups at the Department
of Defense stated they were not notified of such investigations before the
shootings.
Possible
motives
Immediately
after the shooting, analysts and public officials openly debated Hasan's motive
and preceding psychological state: a military activist, Selena Coppa, remarked
that Hasan's psychiatrist colleagues "failed to notice how deeply
disturbed someone right in their midst was." A spokesperson for U.S.
Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, one of the first officials to comment on Hasan's
background, told reporters that Hasan was upset about his pending deployment to
Afghanistan on November 28. Noel Hamad, Hasan's aunt, said that the family was
not aware he was being sent to Afghanistan.
The Dallas Morning News reported on November 17 that ABC News, citing anonymous
sources, reported that investigators suspect that the shootings were triggered
by superiors' refusal to process Hasan’s requests that some of his patients be
prosecuted for war crimes based on statements they made during psychiatric
sessions with him. Dallas attorney Patrick McLain, a former Marine, said that
Hasan may have been legally justified in his request, but he could not comment
without knowing what soldiers had said. Fellow psychiatrists complained to
superiors that Hasan's actions violated doctor-patient confidentiality.
Duane
Reasoner, a convert to Islam whom Hasan was mentoring in the religion, said the
psychiatrist did not want to be deployed. "'He said Muslims shouldn't be
in the U.S. military, because obviously Muslims shouldn't kill Muslims. He told
me not to join the Army.'"
Senator
Joe Lieberman called for a probe by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs, which he chairs. Lieberman said "it's premature
to reach conclusions about what motivated Hasan ... I think it's very
important to let the Army and the FBI go forward with this investigation before
we reach any conclusions." Two weeks later, when opening his committee's
hearings, Lieberman labeled the shooting "the most destructive terrorist
attack on America since September 11, 2001."
Michael
Welner, M.D., a leading forensic psychiatrist with experience examining
mass shooters, said that the shooting had elements common to both ideological
and workplace mass shootings. Welner, who believed Hasan wanted to create a
"spectacle", said that a trauma care worker, even under mental
distress, would not normally be expected to be homicidal toward his patients
unless his ideology trumped his Hippocratic oath–Welner thought Hasan expressed
this in shouting, "Allahu Akhbar," as he shot unarmed men. An
analyst of terror investigations, Carl Tobias, opined that the attack did not
fit the profile of terrorism, and was more similar to the Virginia Tech
massacre, committed by a student believed to be severely mentally ill.
Michael
Scheuer, the retired former head of the Bin Laden Issue Station, and former
U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey have called the event a terrorist attack,
as has the terrorism expert Walid Phares. Retired General Barry McCaffrey said
on Anderson Cooper 360° that "it's starting to appear as if this
was a domestic terrorist attack on fellow soldiers by a major in the Army who
we educated for six years while he was giving off these vibes of disloyalty to
his own force."
Some
of Hasan's former colleagues have said he performed substandard work and
occasionally unnerved them by expressing fervent Islamic views and deep
opposition to the U.S.-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Others were more
concerned about his apparent mental instability and paranoid behaviors.
Throughout his years at Walter Reed, heads of departments had regularly
discussed his mental state, as they were "deeply concerned" about his
behavior.
Sgt.
Fahad Kamal, 26, an Army combat medic and Muslim, said of the shooting:
"It's not because he was Muslim. It's because of his mental
problems."
Brian
Levin of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism wrote that the case
sits at the crossroads of crime, terrorism and mental distress. He compared the
possible role of religion to the beliefs of Scott Roeder, a Christian who
murdered Dr. George Tiller, who practiced abortion. Such offenders "often
self-radicalize from a volatile mix of personal distress, psychological issues,
and an ideology that can be sculpted to justify and explain their anti-social
leanings."
At
his trial in June 2013, Hasan declared his motive as wanting to defend the
lives of the Taliban leadership in Afghanistan. Army prosecutors said that he
sought to align himself with Islamic extremists.
Hasan's
description of motives
In
August, 2013, Fox News released documents from Major Hasan in which he
explained his motives. Most of the documents included the acronym
"SoA", which is considered shorthand for "Soldier of
Allah." In one document, Hasan wrote that he was required to renounce any
oaths that required him to defend any man-made constitution over the
commandments mandated in Islam. In another document, he wrote "I invite
the world to read the book of All-Mighty Allah and decide for themselves if it
is the truth from their Lord. My desire is to help people attain heaven by the
mercy of their Lord."
In
another document, Hasan wrote that there is a fundamental and irreconcilable
conflict between American democracy and Islamic governance. Specifically:
. . . in an American democracy, 'we the people' govern according to what 'we the people' think is right or wrong, even if it specifically goes against what All-Mighty God commands.
He
further explained that separation of Church and State is an unacceptable
attempt to get along with unbelievers, because "Islam was brought to
prevail over other religions" and not to be equal with or subservient to
them.
Reaction
Many
have characterized the attack as terrorism. Two weeks after recommending no
conclusions be drawn until after the investigation was completed, Senator Joe
Lieberman called the shooting "the most destructive terrorist attack on
America since September 11, 2001." Michael Scheuer, the retired former
head of the Bin Laden Issue Station, and former U.S. Attorney General Michael
Mukasey also described it as a terrorist attack. A group of soldiers and
families have sought to have the defense secretary designate the shooting a
"terrorist attack;" this would provide them with benefits equal to
injuries in combat.
The
FBI has found no evidence to indicate Hasan had any co-conspirators or was part
of a broader terrorist plot, and has not established his motives. The Defense
Department currently classifies Hasan's attack as an act of workplace violence
and will not make further statements until the court martial.
President
Obama
The
U.S. President's initial response to the attack came during a scheduled speech
at the Tribal Nations Conference for America’s 564 federally recognized Native
American tribes. Obama was criticized by the media for being
"insensitive", as he addressed the shooting only three minutes into
his prepared speech, and then for not according it sufficient gravitas. Later,
the President delivered the memorial eulogy for the victims. Reaction to his
memorial speech was largely positive, with some deeming it one of his best. The
speech was criticized by a Wall Street Journal reporter, who found the speech
largely absent of emotion, while a National Review columnist criticized
Obama for refusing to acknowledge Islamic terrorism as having a role in the
shooting.
Fort
Hood personnel
Lt.
Gen. Robert W. Cone, commander of III Corps at Fort Hood, said on the day of
the shooting that preliminary evidence did not suggest that the shooting was
terrorism, although it was not being ruled out. Retired Army colonel Terry Lee,
who had worked with Hasan, said the psychiatrist expressed the hope that Obama
would withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, and argued with military
colleagues who supported the wars.
Army Secretary John McHugh, fields a question
from a media member at a press conference on Sadowski Field outside the III
Corps headquarters building at Fort Hood, Texas, Nov. 6, 2009, while Army Chief
of Staff Gen. George Casey looks on. The secretary pledged the Army's
unwavering support for the soldiers and families hit by a Nov. 5 attack by a
lone gunman that left 13 dead and 30 wounded. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Eric
Martinez See more at www.army.mil
|
U.S.
Government
A
spokesman for the Defense Department called the shooting an "isolated and
tragic case", and Defense Secretary Robert Gates pledged that his
department would do "everything in its power to help the Fort Hood
community get through these difficult times." The chair of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, Carl Levin, and numerous politicians, expressed
condolences to the victims and their families.
Homeland
Security Secretary Janet Napolitano stated "we object to—and do not
believe—that anti-Muslim sentiment should emanate from this ... This was
an individual who does not, obviously, represent the Muslim faith." Chief
of Staff Gen. George W. Casey, Jr. said "I'm concerned that this increased
speculation could cause a backlash against some of our Muslim soldiers ...
Our diversity, not only in our Army, but in our country, is a strength. And as
horrific as this tragedy was, if our diversity becomes a casualty, I think
that’s worse."
In
January 2010, a senior Obama administration official, who declined to be named,
referred to the shooting as "an act of terrorism", however other
administration officials have not referred to the shootings as a terrorist
event.
Family members and troops attend the Nov. 10,
2009, memorial service honoring the victims of the Nov. 5 shooting spree that
left 13 dead and 38 wounded.
|
Veteran
groups
Veterans
groups across the United States expressed condolences for victims of the
attack. American Legion National Commander Clarence E. Hill stated, "The
American Legion extends condolences to the victims and the families of those
affected by the shootings at Fort Hood." Veterans of Foreign Wars National
Commander Thomas J. Tradewell Sr. states, "The entire military family is
grieving right now. I just want them to know they do not grieve alone. Our
hearts and prayers are with them."
Military
policy on bases
The
Army prohibits soldiers from carrying personal firearms inside Fort Hood and
other bases. They want to reduce casual violence among the soldiers. Military
weapons are used only for training or by base security, and personal weapons
were kept locked away by the provost marshal. Specialist Jerry Richard, a
soldier working at the Readiness Center, said he felt this policy left the
soldiers vulnerable to violent assaults: "Overseas you are ready for it.
But here you can't even defend yourself." Jacob Sullum, an opponent of gun
control, described the base as a "gun-free zone."
Hasan's
family
A
spokesman for the Hasan family said the actions of their cousin were
"despicable and deplorable", and do not reflect how they were raised.
American
Muslim groups
The
Council on American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR) condemned the shooting and claimed that it was not in
keeping with Muslim teachings. The spokesman asked Americans to treat it as an
"isolated incident of a deranged individual." He alleged that
disturbed individuals could use any religion for their own purposes, but the
Muslim community condemned this violence.
Salman
al-Ouda, a dissident Saudi cleric and former inspiration to Osama
bin Laden, condemned the shooting, saying the incident would have bad
consequences:
"...undoubtedly this man might have a psychological problem; he may be a psychiatrist but he [also] might have had psychological distress, as he was being commissioned to go to Iraq or Afghanistan, and he was capable of refusing to work whatever the consequences were." The senior analyst at the NEFA Foundation described Ouda’s comments as "a good indication of how far on a tangent Anwar al-Awlaki is."
Anwar al Awlaki |
Anwar
al-Awlaki
Soon
after the attack, Anwar al-Awlaki posted praise for Hasan for the shooting on
his website. He wrote, "Nidal Hasan is a hero, the fact that fighting
against the U.S. army is an Islamic duty today cannot be disputed. Nidal has
killed soldiers who were about to be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in order
to kill Muslims." In March 2010, Al-Awlaki alleged that the Obama
administration tried to portray Hasan's actions as an individual act of
violence from an estranged individual, and that it was trying to suppress
information for the American public. He said:
"Until this moment the administration is refusing to release the e-mails exchanged between myself and Nidal. And after the operation of our brother Umar Farouk the initial comments coming from the administration were looking the same – another attempt at covering up the truth. But Al Qaeda cut off Obama from deceiving the world again by issuing their statement claiming responsibility for the operation.
(Note:
The US investigation found no evidence that ties Hasan to al-Qaeda. See section
below.)
On
April 6, 2010, The New York Times reported that President Obama had
authorized the targeted killing of al-Awlaki, who had been hunted by the Yemen
government since going into hiding. On September 30, 2011, two Predator drones
fired missiles at a vehicle with al-Awlaki aboard, killing him and Samir Khan.
The American flag at Fort Hood, Texas, flown at half-staff during a memorial ceremony honoring the victims of the mass shooting |
Investigation
and prosecution
The
criminal investigation was conducted jointly by the FBI, the U.S. Army Criminal
Investigation Command, and the Texas Rangers Division. As a member of the
military, Hasan is subject to the jurisdiction of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice (military law). He was initially represented by Belton, Texas-based
John P. Galligan, a criminal defense attorney and retired US Army Colonel.
Hasan regained consciousness on November 9, but refused to talk to investigators.
The investigative officer in charge of his article 32 hearing was Colonel James
L. Pohl, who had previously led the investigation into the Abu Ghraib abuses,
and is the Chief Presiding Officer of the Guantanamo military commissions.
On
November 9, 2009, the FBI said that investigators believed Hasan had acted
alone. They disclosed that they had reviewed evidence which included 2008
conversations with an individual that an official identified as Anwar
al-Awlaki, but said they did not find any evidence that Hasan had direct help
or outside orders in the shootings. According to a November 11 press release,
after preliminary examination of Hasan’s computers and internet activity, they
had found no information to indicate he had any co-conspirators or was part of
a broader terrorist plot, stressing the "early stages" of the review.
They said no e-mail communications with outside facilitators or known
terrorists were found.
Investigators
were evaluating reports that, in May 2001, Hasan had attended a mosque in
Virginia for the funeral of his mother, which was attended that spring and
summer by two of the 9/11 hijackers. The imam was the American cleric Anwar
al-Awlaki, then considered a moderate. Awlaki has since been accused of aiding
the 9/11 plot and since 2006-2007 has been identified as radicalized.
Investigators were trying to determine if al-Awlaki's teachings influenced
Hasan. For ten years, Hasan prayed several times a week at the Muslim Community
Center in Silver Spring, Maryland, closer to where he lived and worked.
Army
officials said, "Right now we're operating on the belief that he acted
alone and had no help". No motive for the shootings was offered, but they
believed Hasan had written an Internet posting that appeared to support suicide
bombings. Sen. Lieberman opined that Hasan was under personal stress and may
have turned to Islamic extremism.
In
pressing charges against Hasan, the Department of Defense and the DoJ agreed
that Hasan would be prosecuted in a military court. Observers noted this was
consistent with investigators' concluding he had acted alone. During a November
21 hearing in Hasan's hospital room, a magistrate ruled that there was probable
cause that Hasan committed the November 5 shooting, and ordered that he be held
in pre-trial confinement after being released from hospital care. On November
12 and December 2, respectively, Hasan was charged with 13 counts of
premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted murder by the Army; he may face
additional charges at court-martial.
Prosecutors
did not file a count for the death of the fetus of Francheska Velez. Such a
charge is available to prosecutors under the Unborn Victims of Violence Act and
Article 119a of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. If civilian prosecutors
indicted him for being part of a terrorist plot, it could have justified moving
all or part of his case into federal criminal courts under U.S. anti-terrorism
laws. The military justice system rarely carries out capital punishment—and no
executions have been carried out since 1961. Neither has any
incident of mass murder been prosecuted by the military since then. (From 1916
to 1961, the U.S. Army executed 135 people.)
Trial
In
late January 2011, Hasan was judged sane for trial by an Army sanity board,
normally composed of doctors and psychologists. This allowed a capital trial.
More information about his mental state at the time of the shootings can be
introduced by the defense during the trial.
He
was formally arraigned on July 20, 2011. He did not enter a plea, and the judge
granted a request by Hasan's attorney's that a plea be entered at a later,
unspecified, date. The judge initially set a trial date for Maj. Hasan's
court-martial for March 5, 2012. Later, the court-martial date was pushed back
after Hasan switched lawyers, to provide them time to prepare his defense.
Having
previously instructed Hasan to follow Army regulations and shave a beard he had
grown, the judge, Colonel Gregory Gross, found him in contempt in July 2012 and
fined him. His court-martial was set to begin on August 20, 2012. He was fined
again for retaining his beard, and warned that he could be forcibly shaved
prior to his court-martial.
On
August 15, Hasan was scheduled to enter pleas to the charges brought against
him before the beginning of the court-martial; he would not be allowed to plead
guilty to the premeditated murder charges as the prosecution is pursuing the
death penalty in his case. Hasan objected to being shaved against his will, and
his attorney's appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed
Forces. Hasan said having a beard was part of his religious belief.
On
August 27, the Appeals Court announced that the trial could continue, but did
not rule whether Hasan could be forcibly shaved. The Appeals court has rejected
previous attempts by Hasan to receive "religious accommodation" from
Army Regulation to wear his beard. On September 6, Gross ordered that Hasan be
shaved after it was determined that the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act
did not apply to this case; however, it will not be enforced until his appeals
are exhausted, further delaying the trial.
During
the hearing on September 6, 2012, Hasan twice offered to plead guilty; however,
Army rules prohibit the judge from accepting a guilty plea in a death penalty
case. On September 21, defense attorneys of Hasan filed two appeals with the
Army Court of Criminal Appeals regarding his beard, postponing the trial.
Residents of Killeen were upset about the delays in going to trial.
In
mid-October, the Army Court of Criminal Appeals upheld Colonel Gross' decision
that Hasan can be forcibly shaved. Hasan's attorneys filed an appeal to the
Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces seeking to overturn the lower court, and
to have Gross removed.
On
Tuesday, December 4, 2012, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces vacated
Major Hasan's six convictions for contempt of court and removed the judge,
Colonel Gregory Gross, from the case, stating he had not shown the requisite
impartiality. The Court of Appeals overturned an order to have Hasan's beard be
forcibly shaven; it did not rule on whether Hasan's religious rights had been
violated. The Court of Appeals additionally ruled that it was the military
command's responsibility, not the military judge, to ensure Hasan meet grooming
standards. The Army's Judge Advocate General appointed a new judge to replace
Gross. The ruling was called "unusual" by Jeffrey Addicott of the Center
for Terrorism Law at St. Mary's University, and called "rare" by
military defense attorney Frank Spinner.
Colonel
Tara A. Osborn was appointed as the new judge for the trial on the same day
that Gross was removed. In 2011 Osborn presided over a death penalty case, the
court martial of SGT Joseph Bozicevich, who was sentenced to life in prison
without possibility of parole for killing his squad leader and another soldier.
In January 2013, Osborn was deliberating whether to remove the death penalty, due
to the Defense attorney's claim that LTG Campbell was not impartial when it was
decided that Hasan would face the death penalty. On January 31, Osborn ruled
that a capital murder trial was constitutional, based on a 1996 Supreme Court
case regarding Dwight J. Loving; Osborn additionally ruled that her court does
not have jurisdiction regarding Hasan's beard, and it is a matter to take up
with Hasan's chain of command. As of February 28, 2013, the court-martial is
set to start in May 29, 2013, with jury selection to begin on July 1, 2013.
On
June 3, 2013, a military judge gave approval for Hasan to represent himself at
his upcoming murder trial. His attorneys will remain on the case but only if he
asks for their help. Jury selection started on June 5 and opening arguments
took place on August 6. U.S. Army Judge Colonel Tara Osborn ruled on June 14,
2013 that Hassan cannot claim as a part of his defense that he was defending
the Taliban. The trial is scheduled to begin on August 6. During an exclusive
interview with Fox News, Hasan justified his actions during the Fort Hood
shooting by claiming that the US military was at war with Islam. This marked
the first occasion that Hasan had talked to American media since his arrest. In
the past, Hasan has only spoken via telephone with Al-Jazeera.
During
the first day of the trial on August 6, Hasan—who was representing himself—
admitted that he was the gunman during the Fort Hood shootings in 2009 and
stated that the evidence would show that he was the shooter. He also told the
panel hearing that he had "switched sides" and regarded himself as a
Mujahideen waging "jihad" against the United States. By August 7,
disagreements between Hasan and his stand-by defense team led Judge Osborn to
suspend the proceedings. Hassan's defense attorneys were concerned that his
defense strategy would lead to him receiving the death penalty. Since the
prosecution has sought the death penalty, his defense team has sought to
prevent this.
Conviction
On
August 23, 2013, he was convicted on all charges after the jury deliberated for
seven hours.
Sentencing
On
August 28th, 2013, a U.S. military court sentenced him to death for the
shootings. At the time of his sentencing he became only the 6th person on
military death row.
Internal
investigations
Main
article: Joint Terrorism Task Force
The
FBI noted that Hasan had first been brought to their attention in December 2008
by a Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF). Communications between Hasan and
al-Awlaki, and other similar communications, were reviewed and considered to be
consistent with Hasan's professional research at the Walter Reed Medical
Center. "Because the content of the communications was explainable by his
research and nothing else derogatory was found, the JTTF concluded that Major
Hasan was not involved in terrorist activities or terrorist planning."
On
December 2009, FBI Director Robert Mueller appointed William Webster, a former
director of the FBI, to establish a commission to conduct an independent review
of the FBI's handling of assessing the risk that Hasan posed.
On
January 15, 2010, the Department of Defense released the findings of its
investigation, which found that the Department was unprepared to defend against
internal threats. Secretary Robert Gates said that previous incidents had not
drawn enough attention to workplace violence and
"self-radicalization" within the military. He also suggested that
some officials may be held responsible for not drawing attention to Hasan prior
to the shooting. The Department report did not touch upon Hasan's motives.
James
Corum, a retired Army Reserve Lieutenant Colonel and Dean at the Baltic Defence
College in Estonia, called the Defense Department report "a
travesty", for failing to mention Hasan's devotion to Islam and his
radicalization. Texas Representative John Carter criticized the report, saying
he felt the government was "afraid to be accused of profiling somebody".
John Lehman, a member of the 9/11 Commission and Secretary of the Navy under
Ronald Reagan, said he felt that the report "shows you how deeply
entrenched the values of political correctness have become." The columnist
Debra Saunders of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote in an opinion piece:
"Even ... if the report's purpose was to craft lessons to prevent future
attacks, how could they leave out radical Islam?"
The
leaders of the investigation, former Secretary of the Army Togo West and
retired Admiral Vernon Clark, responded by saying their "concern is with
actions and effects, not necessarily with motivations", and that they did
not want to conflict with the criminal investigation on Hasan that was under
way.
In
February 2010, the Boston Globe obtained a confidential internal report
detailing results of the Army's investigation. According to the Globe, the
report concluded that officers within the Army were aware of Hasan's tendencies
toward radical Islam since 2005. It noted one incident in 2007 in which Hasan
gave a classroom presentation titled, "Is the War on Terrorism a War on
Islam: An Islamic Perspective". The instructor reportedly interrupted
Hasan, as he thought the psychiatrist was trying to justify terrorism,
according to the Globe. Hasan's superior officers took no action related to
this incident, believing Hasan's comments were protected under the First
Amendment and that having a Muslim psychiatrist contributed to diversity. The
report noted that Hasan's statements might have been grounds for removing him
from service, as the First Amendment did not apply to soldiers in the same way
as for civilians.
In
July 2012, the Webster Commission's final report was submitted. Webster made 18
recommendations to the FBI. The report found issues in information sharing,
failure to follow up on leads, computer technology issues, and failure of the
FBI headquarters to coordinate two field offices working on leads related to
Hasan.
In
August 2013, Mother Jones magazine described multiple intercepted emails
from Hasan to Awlaki. In one 2008 email, Hasan asked Awlaki whether he
considered those who died attacking their fellow soldiers "Shaheeds",
or martyrs. In a 2009 email, Hasan asked Awlaki whether "indiscriminately
killing civilians" was allowed. Both emails were forwarded to the Defense
Criminal Investigative Services (DCIS). However, DCIS failed to connect the two
emails to each other, and the 2008 email was given only a cursory
investigation. A DCIS agent later explained that the subject was "politically
sensitive".
Lawsuit
A
lawsuit filed in November 2011 by victims and their family members alleges that
the government's failure to take action against Hasan before the attack was
willful negligence prompted by "political correctness." The 83 claimants
seek $750 million in compensation from the Army.
As
of 2012, the Department of Defense classifies the case as one of workplace
violence. A spokesman for the Department stated,
"The Department of Defense is committed to the integrity of the ongoing court martial proceedings of Major Nadal Hassan and for that reason will not further characterize, at this time, the incident that occurred at Fort Hood on November 5, 2009. Major Hassan has been charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder, and 32 counts of attempted murder. As with all pending UCMJ matters, the accused is innocent until proven guilty."
A
group of 160 victims and family members have asked the government to declare
the Fort Hood attack an act of terrorism, which would mean that injuries would
be treated as if the victims were in a combat zone, providing them more
benefits. US Representatives John R. Carter and Michael T. McCaul wrote,
"Based on all the facts, it is inconceivable to us that the DOD and the
Army continue to label this attack ‘workplace violence’ in spite of all the
evidence that clearly proves the Fort Hood shooting was an act of terror."
Carter and McCaul drew their conclusions from their interpretation of existing
investigations.
On
November 5, 2012, 148 plaintiffs, including victims and families of victims,
filed a wrongful death claim against the United States Government, Hasan, and
the estate of Anwar al-Awlaki. Their lawsuit alleges there were due process
violations, intentional misrepresentation, assault and battery, gross
negligence, and civil conspiracy.
The
lawsuit was featured on ABC News on February 12, 2013, with Kimberly
Munley stating that Obama has not kept his promise of taking care of the
victims of the shooting.
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