Marine’s Murder Conviction For Iraqi Death Overturned
By Patriots Blog | Thursday, April 22nd, 2010
Crossposted from KGTV San Diego.
SAN DIEGO — A military appeals court Thursday overturned the murder conviction of a Camp Pendleton Marine in the 2006 killing of an Iraqi man near Hamdania.
Lawrence Hutchins, 26, will remain in prison until the Marine Corps decides whether to appeal, the Los Angeles Times reported.
The Washington, D.C.- based Navy-Marine Court of Criminal Appeals found that the then-sergeant was denied a fair trial because one of his lead attorneys was allowed to get off the case just before the court-martial, according to published reports.
Prosecutors said Hutchins masterminded a plan to kidnap and kill suspected insurgent Saleh Gowad, but grabbed Hashim Awad instead when Gowad’s family foiled the plot.
Hutchins was convicted in 2007 of unpremeditated murder and other charges and sentenced to 11 years in prison.
Seven Marines and one Navy corpsman were initially charged in the case. None of their sentences were higher than 16 months.
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It was the only murder conviction the U.S. government had gotten in one of the highest-profile criminal cases against U.S. troops to arise out of the war in Iraq.
A military appeals court on Thursday overturned the murder conviction of Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins III. The Camp Pendleton Marine led a squad that included six Marines and one Navy corpsman who were also charged in connection with the April 2006 murder of Hashim Ibrahim Awad, 52, in the village of Hamdania.
The court said it based its decision on the fact that a military defense attorney assigned to Hutchins was improperly dismissed before his trial in 2007.
The ruling by the U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Appeals in Washington sets the stage for the release of Hutchins.
The case is now back with the Navy Judge Advocate General’s Corps, which will decide whether to appeal the decision or order a retrial.
Thad Coakley, a former Marine Corps judge advocate, said he believes the government will appeal.
“When you have a serious allegation that at least was substantiated at one point that this squad leader of Marines and a Navy corpsman kidnapped and executed an Iraqi detainee — which is essentially murder — if you don’t pursue that, how do you show that you’re holding Marines to a standard of accountability?” he said.
Coakley added that the court’s “opinion makes no comment and therefore no judgment on the validity of the facts associated with this case. This opinion is focused upon a procedural error and a failure to maintain an attorney-client relationship.”
Prosecutors said Hutchins led a squad that was on a mission to find an insurgent and when they failed to find the suspect at his home, the military men went to a nearby house and pulled out Awad, killed him and then planted an AK-47 and shovel to make Awad look like an insurgent planting a bomb.
Hutchins has been serving an 11-year sentence in a military prison in Leavenworth, Kan.
“Let’s hope Larry can come home,” his mother Kathy Hutchins said in a phone interview from Plymouth, Mass. “It’s not like the charges can be dropped, there still can be a retrial, but we hope that he can come home and hold his daughter.”
Hutchins, 26, has a five-year-old daughter, Kylie. He learned of the court decision from his attorney, Marine Capt. S. Babu Kaza.
“He was surprised to get good news because it’s really the first time it’s happened since he got put in confinement,” Kaza told the North County Times.
Hutchins — the leader of the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment squad — was reduced in rank to private after his conviction. Thursday’s ruling could restore that.
Navy corpsman Petty Officer 3rd Class Melson J. Bacos of Franklin, Wis., pleaded guilty to kidnapping, conspiracy to kidnap and making false official statements. Marine Lance Cpl. John J. Jodka III, of Encinitas, Calif., pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and conspiracy to obstruct justice.
Lance Cpl. Tyler A. Jackson, of Tracy, Calif., pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and conspiracy to obstruct justice. Lance Cpl. Jerry E. Shumate Jr., of Matlock, Wash., pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and conspiracy to obstruct justice.
All will get either an honorable or general discharge. They have no recourse to appeal.
Three other defendants left the military after their prison terms ended.






April 23rd, 2010 at 8:31 am
United American Patriots (UAP) contributed more than $13,000.00 towards legal expenses in Hutchin’s case and more than $ 4,600.00 to the parents so that they could travel to Ft Leavenworth to see their son.
Let’s pray that the Marine Corps will decide not to retry Larry.