On the day of the attack, the document said, Green and other soldiers drank
alcohol and changed out of their uniforms to avoid detection before going to the
woman's house. Green used a brown T-shirt to cover his face.
Once there, the affidavit said, Green took three members of the family ¡ª an
adult male and female, and a girl estimated to be 5 years old ¡ª into a bedroom.
Shots were heard. Green allegedly shot the woman in the head after he and
another soldier raped her, the affidavit said.
Green was dishonorably discharged from the Army because of a "personality
disorder" before the attack came to light, the affadavit said. He is being
prosecuted in federal, rather than military court because he is no longer in the
Army.
Iraqi authorities identified the rape victim as Abeer Qassim Hamza. The other
victims were her father, Qassim Hamza, her mother, Fikhriya Taha, and her
sister, Hadeel Qassim Hamza.
The affidavit estimated the rape victim was about 25. But a doctor at the
Mahmoudiya hospital gave her age as 14. He refused to be identified for fear of
reprisals.
Mahdi Obeid, a neighbor of the victims, said that he was sitting in his house
when he saw fire coming from the house on March 12. He rushed over to find
Abeer's body on fire. He extinguished the flames and saw bullets in her head and
chest.
"It was a horrible scene," he said. "If I could go back in time, I would have
not dared enter the house. I cannot wipe those barbaric scenes from my memory."
An insurgent group, the Mujahedeen Army, distributed an account of the
incident on an Islamist Web site. It appeared the report, which generally
corresponded with details already made public, was designed to draw attention to
the deaths and stir up hostility against the US military.
The Azzaman newspaper expressed skepticism that the soldiers would be
severely punished.
"The US Army will conduct an investigation and the result at best is already
known. One or two US.soldiers will receive a 'touristic punishment' and the
whole crime will be forgotten as it happened with Abu Ghraib criminals," the
newspaper said, referring to the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by US guards at a
prison in west Baghdad.