Friday, December 07, 2012
Jailer: GI in WikiLeaks case needed to speak up
AP News
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FORT MEADE, Md. (AP) — An Army private charged with sending reams of classified documents to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks could have gotten his tight pretrial confinement conditions reduced by clearly explaining why he wasn't a suicide risk, the former commander of a Marine Corps brig testified Friday.

When Pfc. Bradley Manning did speak up, his crack about hanging himself with his underwear only heightened the concern for his safety, Chief Warrant Officer 2 Denise Barnes said, so she ordered him to be stripped naked each night.

"There was never an intent to punish Pfc. Manning," she testified for the prosecution at a pretrial hearing.

Barnes said she didn't consider Manning's comment in early March 2011 serious enough to warrant placing him on suicide watch but "I felt that I needed not to take that comment lightly, and I didn't."

Barnes testified on the ninth day of a hearing to determine whether Manning's nine months in maximum custody at the base in Quantico, Va., amounted to illegal pretrial punishment. He was always on either suicide watch or injury-prevention status, and Manning claims the conditions were so harsh that the charges, including aiding the enemy, should be dropped.

Barnes was the 11th government witness to testify at the hearing, which is scheduled to end Wednesday. She was the brig commander during the final three months of Manning's stay at Quantico, before he was moved to medium-security pretrial confinement at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

She said Manning's history of suicidal thoughts before he arrived at Quantico in July 2010, and his generally uncommunicative behavior in the brig, weighed heavily on her decision to keep him tightly confined despite almost weekly psychiatric evaluations concluding he wasn't a suicide risk.

"They would say, from a psychiatric standpoint, there's really nothing. But we all know you don't have to have a mental health issue to want to kill yourself," Barnes said. She then cited the case of Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher, who fatally shot his girlfriend and himself last week.

She said Manning never directly approached her to explain why he believed he was no longer a suicide risk and why he deserved relief from restrictions including confinement to his cell 23 hours a day.

"He never did it. I would hope every day," she said. Continued...

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