Hearing for ‘thrill kill’ US soldiers

Calvin Gibbs. Photo / Facebook

SEATTLE – The soldiers who reported to Staff Sergeant Calvin Gibbs paint a monstrous picture: he killed Afghan civilians for sport, they say, and encouraged others to do the same.

He collected fingers of the dead, plotted against his own men and found it amusing to slaughter animals with his assault rifle.

Gibbs will get a chance to contest that portrait today at a military hearing at Joint Base Lewis-McChord south of Seattle on charges that include murder, dereliction of duty and trying to impede an investigation.

The Article 32 hearing is similar to a United States civilian grand jury proceeding, with a military judge looking into charges to see if there is enough evidence to send the case to a court martial.

Gibbs insists all of the deaths were appropriate engagements, according to his lawyer, Phillip Stackhouse, who declined to comment further.

The 25-year-old from Billings, Montana, is the highest ranking of five soldiers charged in the murders of three civilians during patrols in Kandahar Province this year in the ‘thrill kill’ case – one of the most gruesome of the Afghan war.

“He liked to kill,” said Specialist Adam Winfield, who said he tried to blow the whistle on the alleged murder plot before taking part in the final killing. “He manipulated a lot of us into doing what he wanted us to do.”

Gibbs arrived in the platoon late last year and soon began telling his subordinates how easy it would be to kill civilians, some soldiers told investigators in statements reviewed by AP.

Gibbs reportedly spoke of getting away with killing a family when he served in Iraq – a claim investigators are still looking into.

He devised scenarios under which he could kill Afghan civilians, the soldiers said, suggesting in one case that if he and his men came across someone in a village flagged as Taleban-influenced, they could toss a grenade and claim they had been responding to a threat.

Gibbs also illicitly collected weapons – including an AK-47 and a rocket-propelled grenade – which he could plant on the bodies of dead civilians to make them appear to be combatants, the soldiers said.

In addition to the killings, Gibbs and some of his men fired at – but missed – two unarmed farmers during a patrol in March, investigators were told.

Gibbs falsely reported that they shot at three combatants, one armed with a rocket launcher, according to Staff Sergeant Robert Stevens, of Portland, Oregon, who said he took part in the attack but tried to miss the farmers.

“I was extremely thankful to find out that we had not killed or wounded either of those two individuals, and I regret not trying to stop Staff Sergeant Gibbs from trying to kill innocent people,” he said in a sworn statement.

Stevens, Gibbs and four other soldiers are charged with conspiring to commit aggravated assault in that incident. The probe of the killings started after a witness in a drug investigation, Private First Class Justin Stoner, reported being badly beaten by a group of soldiers led by Gibbs.

Stoner said Gibbs and the other central figure in the case, Specialist Jeremy Morlock, of Wasilla, Alaska, later returned to his room, where Gibbs laid a set of severed fingers on the floor as Morlock warned him not to rat.

“I believe he has no regard for any life in general,” Stoner said of Gibbs. “I have watched him slaughter animals with his M-4 and finding it amusing is just completely wrong.”

He believed Morlock had three unjustified kills.

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