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Nickdfresh
03-05-2006, 09:39 AM
Army to Begin New Probe Into Tillman Death
Sunday, March 5, 2006 9:04 AM EST
http://web.adelphia.net/api/hangar.php/c21hcnRjcm9wOjIyMDoyNTAscmVzaXplOjIyMDoyNTA=/http://newsimages.adelphia.net/ap_photos//054c395e-fc1d-45f6-847f-a42383f19f2e.jpeg
The Associated Press (http://www.adelphia.net/news/read.php?id=12625998&ps=1010&lang=en)
By ROBERT BURNS and LOLITA BALDOR

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Army said Saturday it will launch a criminal investigation into the April 2004 death of Pat Tillman, the former professional football player who was shot to death by fellow soldiers in Afghanistan in what previous Army reviews had concluded was an accidental shooting.

Col. Joseph Curtin, an Army spokesman, said the Defense Department office of inspector general had reviewed the matter at the Army's request and concluded that a criminal probe was warranted.

Members of the Tillman family were notified on Friday, Curtin said. In the past, Tillman's father, Patrick Tillman, and other family members have criticized the Army and its investigations.

"We are obligated to answer the family's questions, as we are with all grieving families," Curtin said.

Curtin said the scope of the new investigation by the Army Criminal Investigation Command had not yet been determined in detail.

A Pentagon official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the new investigation has not been formally begun, said it would focus on possible charges of negligent homicide.

A second Pentagon official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said no specific soldier is under investigation at this point. He said the CID will conduct an overall death investigation and "let the facts take them where they may."

The official said that the CID's probe — the fifth formal investigation into the incident — will focus on the cause of Tillman's death, not necessarily on whether the previous investigations were done correctly. It is the first criminal probe.

Tillman's mother, Mary, told the Washington Post Saturday that the criminal investigation should have been launched at the onset. "The military has had every opportunity to do the right thing and they haven't," she said. "They knew all along that something was seriously wrong and they just wanted to cover it up."

His father, Patrick Tillman Sr., told the Post that he questioned whether another investigation would provide anymore answers.

"I think it's another step," he said. "But if you send investigators to reinvestigate an investigation that was falsified in the first place, what do you think you're going to get?"

Two initial fact-finding investigations were conducted at the unit level right after Tillman's death. He was a member of the Army's 75th Ranger Regiment. A third investigation was conducted by U.S. Army Special Operations Command, and a concurrent investigation was done by the Army's Safety Center.

Tillman, 27, died on April 22, 2004, when he was struck by gunfire during a firefight along a canyon road near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The Army said at the time that the barrage of bullets came from enemy fire.

A report by the Army later found that troops with Tillman knew at the time that friendly fire had killed the football star. Officers destroyed critical evidence and concealed the truth from Tillman's brother, also an Army Ranger, who was nearby, the report found.

More than three weeks after a memorial service in San Jose, Calif., the Army announced on May 29, 2004, that friendly fire rather than an enemy encounter caused Tillman's death. However, even at the time of the memorial, top Army officials were aware that the investigation showed the death had been caused by an act of "gross negligence," the report said.

Despite the Army's findings, the officer who prepared the Special Operations Command report, Brig. Gen. Gary M. Jones, concluded there was no official reluctance to report the truth. Army officials have acknowledged that they should have better handled the information they released on Tillman's death.

The Defense Department's inspector general started a review of the matter last August, in the wake of complaints from the Tillman family about how the matter had been handled.

Tillman joined the Army after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks even though he had a multimillion-dollar contract to play football for the Arizona Cardinals. He and his brother completed a tour in Iraq before going to Afghanistan.

ULTRAMAN VH
03-05-2006, 06:08 PM
What a waste of a great athlete. War is hell.

Va Beach VH Fan
03-05-2006, 08:21 PM
Very difficult situation, considering the circumstances....

Part of me is content that they're doing the investigation, but the other part of me thinks the only reason they're actually doing the investigation is because of his celebrity status....

I'm sure there are other families related to those killed in this ficticious "Global War on Terrorism" (in Iraq anyway) would like a criminal investigation into their son's death....

LoungeMachine
03-05-2006, 08:24 PM
Why are you "cheering" the death of Pat Tillman by posting this?

Signed,

Dr. ASSVibe

Nickdfresh
03-26-2007, 06:46 PM
Military Finds No Criminal Wrongdoing in Tillman's Death, but Admits Critical Errors Were Made

03-26-2007 5:03 PM
By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (Associated Press) -- High-ranking Army officers made critical errors in reporting the friendly fire death of Army Ranger Pat Tillman in Afghanistan, but there was no criminal wrongdoing in the shooting of the former NFL star by fellow soldiers, the military concluded Monday.

Army and Defense Department investigators said that officers looking into the incident passed along misleading and inaccurate information and delayed reporting their belief that Tillman was killed by fellow Rangers. The investigators recommended the Army take action against the officers.

Among those blamed were the three-star general in charge of Army special operations as well as Tillman's regimental commander.

The investigation also recommended that the Army review its award of the Silver Star to Tillman, but the acting secretary of the Army said the award would stand. Defense Department Acting Inspector General Thomas F. Gimble said some information provided to justify the citation was inaccurate.

The highest current ranking officer blamed in the incident is Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, commander of the Joint Special Operations Command. Investigators said he was "accountable for the inaccurate and misleading assertions" contained in the papers recommending that Tillman get the Silver Star.

But investigators said there was no broad cover-up. "We thought there was never an attempt to cover up that we saw," Gimble said.

The conclusions were described by Army investigators as they released a pair of reports into Tillman's 2004 killing. The military initially told the public and Tillman's family that the death had occurred during an ambush in a remote part of Afghanistan but did not say it was caused by members of his own unit.

Tillman's death received worldwide attention because he had walked away from a huge professional football contract from the Arizona Cardinals to enlist in the Army after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

"We as an Army failed in our duty to the Tillman family, the duty we owe to all the families of our fallen soldiers: Give them the truth, the best we know it, as fast as we can," said Acting Army Secretary Pete Geren. "Our failure in fulfilling this duty brought discredit to the Army and compounded the grief suffered by the Tillman family. For that, on behalf of the Army, I apologize to the Tillman family."

The Army, he said, will take corrective action and hold people accountable.

He said he had accepted the recommendation of an Army board that Tillman's Silver Star award be affirmed, even though some information submitted in support of it was inaccurate. "The Silver Star stands," Geren said. He added that the citation would be rewritten to correct inaccuracies.

___

Associated Press writer Scott Lindlaw contributed to this story from San Jose, Calif.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

hideyoursheep
03-28-2007, 04:33 PM
Originally posted by ULTRAMAN VH
What a waste of a great athlete.

Waste? Regardless of how it happened there should be stadiums and streets named after him. His principles were more important than money, which is more than I can say for a lot of other people.

blueturk
03-28-2007, 09:28 PM
Tillman was indeed a true hero, which makes the fact that the Bush administration had a hand in trying to cover up the truth about Tillman's death even worse.

knuckleboner
03-28-2007, 11:01 PM
Originally posted by Va Beach VH Fan
Very difficult situation, considering the circumstances....

Part of me is content that they're doing the investigation, but the other part of me thinks the only reason they're actually doing the investigation is because of his celebrity status....

I'm sure there are other families related to those killed in this ficticious "Global War on Terrorism" (in Iraq anyway) would like a criminal investigation into their son's death....

yeah but the problem is that the military hierarchy, themselves, used that celebrty status.

would they have gone to such lengths to ensure that an average GI Joe's funeral had soldiers giving what would turn out to be false information painting the death as heroic?

the military knew that tillman was our most famous soldier. and had his death happened to joe citizen, the military might've looked bad for only a brief time, if that, because we all know war isn't perfect.

but because the military knew everybody would be paying attention to pat tillman's death, it allowed the heroic death story, which it knew to be wrong, to continue to make the rounds for far too long.

and that should be addressed.