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Marine Guilty of Murder in Retrial for 2006 Killing of Iraqi Civilian

A military jury has found a Marine sergeant guilty of murder in the retrial of a major Iraq war-crimes case involving the 2006 killing of a retired Iraqi policeman.
Lawrence Hutchins III
FILE - In this June 29, 2010 file photo, U.S. Marine Sergeant Lawrence Hutchins III poses for a portrait in Oceanside, Calif. A third retrial is set to begin for Hutchins, convicted in a high-profile court martial case for the 2006 killing of an Iraqi civilian.Adam Lau / AP

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. — A military jury has found a Marine sergeant guilty of murder in the retrial of a major Iraq war-crimes case involving the 2006 killing of a retired Iraqi policeman.

The jury of three enlisted men and three military officers deliberated for over three hours Wednesday before reaching a verdict in the case of Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins III.

The defense argued the military inquiry was shoddy and did not support the allegations that Hutchins and his squad killed 52-year-old Hashim Ibrahim Awad from the village of Hamdania, and then planted an AK-47 rifle next to his bullet-riddled body to make it look like he was an insurgent.

"You don't have to convict Sgt. Hutchins of anything," Attorney Christopher Oprison, who represented Hutchins, said during closing arguments.

Hutchins was allowed to go home but will return Thursday for sentencing, when he will learn if the judge will credit him for the seven years he already served of an 11-year sentence.

Lawrence Hutchins III
FILE - In this June 29, 2010 file photo, U.S. Marine Sergeant Lawrence Hutchins III poses for a portrait in Oceanside, Calif. A third retrial is set to begin for Hutchins, convicted in a high-profile court martial case for the 2006 killing of an Iraqi civilian.Adam Lau / AP

Hutchins had his conviction overturned twice by military courts after rulings that there were errors in the handling of his case. Under the military justice system, the Navy was allowed to order his case to be retried.

The military's highest court, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, ruled in 2013 that Navy interrogators in Iraq at the time violated his rights by holding him in solitary confinement for seven days without access to a lawyer.

Hutchins was convicted of murder in the death of Awad. The six other Marines and a Navy corpsman in his squad served less than 18 months locked up.

All but one of his former seven squad mates has refused to testify again at his retrial. Many have said they now do not stand behind the statements they gave to military interrogators in 2006.

Maj. Samson Newsome argued for the prosecution that investigators spent hours at the crime scene and in the village but were misled by Hutchins after he lied to them, saying the shooting was justified because he had fired upon them and had been digging a hole for a roadside bomb. That cost military officers weeks in tracking down the crime, he said.

But investigators later secured the correct body, correct weapon and testimony from squad mates supporting allegations that Hutchins and his squad set out to find an Iraqi man to kill that April night, Newsome told jurors. Prosecutors said Hutchins shot the man three times in the face and then bragged to his squad mates about getting away with murder.

Newsome told the court his squad mates do not want to testify because they don't want to "come in and talk about the disgusting thing they did."

In their affidavits stating their refusal to testify, "they never claimed they didn't murder the man," Newsome said.

Hutchins has been in and out of the brig because of the rulings.

He was released briefly after a lower court overturned Hutchins' conviction in 2010, ruling his trial in 2007 was unfair because his lead defense lawyer quit shortly before it began. But the military's highest court at that time overruled that decision, saying the problem was not grave enough to throw out the conviction.

Then he was released again for a few months after the highest court ruled interrogators had violated his rights by keeping him in solitary confinement.

Prosecutors argued that Hutchins waived his right to counsel at the time and willfully told his side of the story without coercion.