CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - A Marine who said he never fired a shot in the
kidnapping and murder of an Iraqi man was sentenced Saturday to 8 years in
military prison the longest sentence yet in the case.
US Marine Lance Cpl. Robert B. Pennington, center, walks to
his court martial proceedings alongside his mother, Deanna Pennington,
left, and girlfriend Krystal Morey, right, Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2007, at Camp
Pendleton Marine Corps Base, Calif. Pennington is facing charges related
to the death of 52-year-old Hashim Ibrahim Awad on April 26, 2006 in
Hamdania, Iraq. [AP]
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Lance Cpl. Robert B. Pennington,
22, also was reduced in rank and given a dishonorable discharge during the
sentencing hearing at the Camp Pendleton Marine base.
Pennington was part of an eight-member squad accused of kidnapping and
killing Hashim Ibrahim Awad, 52, last April in the Iraqi town of Hamdania.
Investigators said the Marines dragged Awad from his home, shot him, and then
planted an AK-47 and a shovel by his body to make it look like he was an
insurgent planting a bomb.
Pennington, the squad's radio operator, testified at his court-martial that
he did not shoot Awad but said he helped force the man into a roadside hole and
held his hand over his mouth.
"It's been an emotional roller coaster," Pennington's mother, Deanna
Pennington, said after the sentencing. "Bobby died in Fallujah. I want to bring
him back."
The Marine from Mukilteo, Wash., pleaded guilty Tuesday to kidnapping and
conspiracy. Murder, larceny and housebreaking charges will be dismissed if he
completes terms of a plea bargain requiring him to testify for the government
and remain on good behavior.
Pennington was the sixth member of the squad to plead guilty in the case,
though one of those troops withdrew his plea ahead of his sentencing.
He was sentenced to a total of 14 years but the military judge suspended six
years and gave him credit for more than a year he has already served.
The sentence will be automatically reviewed by a military appeals court.
Pennington's civilian attorney, David Brahms, said he will try to have the
sentence commuted.