U.S. officer accused of aiding enemy
BAGHDAD (AP) -- A U.S. officer has been accused of aiding the enemy -- a charge that carries the death penalty -- for allegedly providing an unmonitored cell phone to detainees while he commanded an MP detachment at the jail that held Saddam Hussein, the military said Thursday.
Army Lt. Col. William H. Steele faces nine charges in all, including fraternizing with a prisoner's daughter, storing and marking classified material, maintaining an inappropriate relationship with an interpreter and possessing pornographic videos.
The rare charges were among the most serious levied against a senior American officer in Iraq, but were the latest in a series of embarrassments for the U.S. military detention system here.
The incidents are alleged to have occurred from October 2005 to this February, starting when Steele was commander of the 451st Military Police Detachment at Camp Cropper on the western outskirts of Baghdad and in his later post as a senior patrol officer for the provincial transition team headquarters at nearby Camp Victory, the main U.S. military base.
Steele was detained in March and is being held in Kuwait pending an Article 32 hearing, the military equivalent of a grand jury hearing, officials said. His age and hometown were not released.
Eugene Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military Justice, said the charge of aiding the enemy "could cover a multitude of sins," but he said a prosecutor would be hard pressed to get a death sentence without showing "evidence that the purpose was really to aid the enemy and hurt our side."
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