Accountability Tillman Investigation

After years of bureaucratic ass covering on this tragedy, some sacrificial goats are being offered up:

Pentagon to cite 9 officers in ex-NFL star’s death

Pentagon officials say a Defense Department investigation will recommend that nine officers be held accountable for the aftermath of the friendly-fire death of Army Ranger Pat Tillman, according to The Associated Press.

The Pentagon’s inspector general will describe errors and inappropriate conduct during the military’s investigation of the former football star’s death in Afghanistan in 2004, one defense official told AP.

The official, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the investigation, told AP that military leaders may have lacked adequate information or failed to pursue it.

The U.S. Army last year launched a criminal investigation into the death of Tillman, who gave up his career with the National Football League’s Arizona Cardinals to fight terrorism after the 9/11 attacks.

Initial reports after his death said Tillman, 27, was shot and killed by Taliban forces during an ambush on April 22, 2004. An investigation later found that fellow soldiers shot Tillman, thinking he was part of an enemy force firing at them.

Tillman’s family demanded to know why his uniform and body armor were burned a day after he was killed and why they were not immediately told he might have been killed by fellow soldiers.

A 2005 report from Brig. Gen. Gary Jones contained sworn statements from soldiers involved in the incident who said they burned the items because they had taken pictures of the scene and knew how Tillman had been killed.

Initially, Tillman’s blood-covered uniform and armor were said to have been destroyed because they were considered a biohazard.

Two years before his death, Tillman walked away from a $3.6 million contract with the NFL’s Arizona Cardinals to serve in the military. He was posthumously awarded a Silver Star.

Tillman was a member of A Company, 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment based at Fort Lewis, Washington. His brother, Kevin, trained with him and served in the same unit.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/23/tillman.death/index.html

Quit crying join the Army if you are so upset.

[quote]PinkMist wrote:
Quit crying join the Army if you are so upset.[/quote]

Ah, idiocy rears its microcephalic head. Well, idiocy, I served my country honorably in the United States Marine Corps and many hard years later I no longer have the physical capacity to serve. It may interest you to know that besides joining the military, other options are open to individuals to help remember this man who wanted to make a difference, whether he believed the government line or not, such as posting it on a website where his kind of courage, sacrifice and warrior spirit are appreciated.

Thank you so much, though, for your well thought out and eloquently expressed contribution to this thread on a great American tragedy.

Tillman?s family wants congressional probe
5 investigations after death, relatives accuse Pentagon of misleading them

SAN JOSE - Pat Tillman?s family firmly rejected the Defense Department?s findings into the former NFL star?s friendly-fire death in Afghanistan, calling for congressional investigations into what they see as broad malfeasance and a coverup.

?Perhaps subpoenas are necessary to elicit candor and accuracy from the military,? his family said in a statement Monday night, after hearing the results of the latest probes.

The men who shot Tillman have always claimed the April 22, 2004, incident was a terrible mistake in the fog of war, and the Army officially agreed Monday, declining to press charges.

The family is saying the Pentagon didn’t just mislead them, that the Pentagon tried to mislead the whole country… That the Pentagon tried to use Pat Tillman as a recruiting tool even after they knew he had been killed by friendly fire. The family are accusing the Pentagon of a deliberate cover-up, for recruiting purposes.

[quote]Brad61 wrote:
The family is saying the Pentagon didn’t just mislead them, that the Pentagon tried to mislead the whole country… That the Pentagon tried to use Pat Tillman as a recruiting tool even after they knew he had been killed by friendly fire. The family are accusing the Pentagon of a deliberate cover-up, for recruiting purposes.[/quote]

Yeah, I don’t know on that. Obviously there was a coverup and the family and the memory of his service were dishonored by it and those responsible should be held accountable, but I don’t know that it went beyond bureaucratic ass covering…

Gen. tried to warn Bush on Tillman

Just seven days after Pat Tillman’s death, a top general warned there were strong indications that it was friendly fire and President Bush might embarrass himself if he said the NFL star-turned-soldier died in an ambush, according to a memo obtained by The Associated Press.

The memo reinforces suspicions that the Pentagon was more concerned with sparing officials from embarrassment than with leveling with Tillman’s family

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070330/ap_on_re_us/tillman_friendly_fire

New details on Tillman’s death. A T-Man’s last words.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070727/ap_on_re_us/tillman_friendly_fire

The documents also shed new light on Tillman’s last moments.

It has been widely reported by the AP and others that Spc. Bryan O’Neal, who was at Tillman’s side as he was killed, told investigators that Tillman was waving his arms shouting “Cease fire, friendlies, I am Pat (expletive) Tillman, damn it!” again and again.

But the latest documents give a different account from a chaplain who debriefed the entire unit days after Tillman was killed.

The chaplain said that O’Neal told him he was hugging the ground at Tillman’s side, “crying out to God, help us. And Tillman says to him, `Would you shut your (expletive) mouth? God’s not going to help you; you need to do something for yourself, you sniveling …”

[quote]Grimnuruk wrote:
PinkMist wrote:
Quit crying join the Army if you are so upset.

Ah, idiocy rears its microcephalic head. Well, idiocy, I served my country honorably in the United States Marine Corps and many hard years later I no longer have the physical capacity to serve. It may interest you to know that besides joining the military, other options are open to individuals to help remember this man who wanted to make a difference, whether he believed the government line or not, such as posting it on a website where his kind of courage, sacrifice and warrior spirit are appreciated.

Thank you so much, though, for your well thought out and eloquently expressed contribution to this thread on a great American tragedy.[/quote]

[quote]Grimnuruk wrote:
PinkMist wrote:
Quit crying join the Army if you are so upset.

Ah, idiocy rears its microcephalic head. Well, idiocy, I served my country honorably in the United States Marine Corps and many hard years later I no longer have the physical capacity to serve. It may interest you to know that besides joining the military, other options are open to individuals to help remember this man who wanted to make a difference, whether he believed the government line or not, such as posting it on a website where his kind of courage, sacrifice and warrior spirit are appreciated.

Thank you so much, though, for your well thought out and eloquently expressed contribution to this thread on a great American tragedy.[/quote]

Hey dumbass, he said to join the ARMY, not the Marine Corps! Nah, I’m just screwing with you. From one jarhead to another, I can’t see how being pissed off at the details of the death of a soldier or Marine being covered up could be considered an anti-military statement. Perhaps the military wouldn’t waive Pinkmist’s ASVAB score. Semper,

mike