Mass. Marine's Sentence For Iraq Killing Is Reduced

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Boston Globe
May 8, 2008 By Thomas Watkins, Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- A Camp Pendleton Marine from Massachusetts who was sentenced to 15 years in the brig for killing an Iraqi man has had his sentence reduced by four years, the troop's lawyer said yesterday.
Rich Brannon, the civilian lawyer for Lawrence G. Hutchins III of Plymouth, Mass., said the reduction was made after he appealed for clemency to Lieutenant General Samuel T. Helland, Hutchins's commanding general.
"I was pleased to see a reduction, but I would like to see more," Brannon said by phone from North Carolina.
Brannon said he had not yet seen official paperwork approving Hutchins's sentence reduction, but he learned of the decision Tuesday from the Marine's legal team at Camp Pendleton.
A Marine spokesman was not immediately available to comment late yesterday.
Hutchins was the leader of an eight-man squad accused of kidnapping Hashim Ibrahim Awad, 52, from his home in April 2006, then marching him to a ditch and shooting him to death. The killing took place in Hamdania, a small village in Anbar Province.
Hutchins was sentenced Aug. 3 after being convicted of murder, conspiracy to commit murder, making a false official statement, and larceny.
Hutchins had been charged with premeditated murder, but premeditation was removed from the verdict, meaning he no longer faced a mandatory life sentence.
All eight squad members - seven Marines and one Navy corpsman - were initially charged with murder and kidnapping, but four lower-ranking Marines and the sailor cut deals with prosecutors in exchange for their testimony and received sentences ranging from one to eight years in prison. Other Marines were convicted of lesser charges.
 
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