Fort
Hood Shooting 'Oddities': Major Nidal Hasan Full Of Awards
- NDS, The Army Ribbon And War On Terrorism Medals
Writers Articles And Opinions
15 November 2009
By
Lori Price
CLG Exclusive: Fort Hood: 'This story stinks to high
heaven.' SFC, who spent ten years at Fort Hood,
comments on Ft. Hood events 09 Nov 2009 I spent 10
years at Ft Hood. There is no way this 'official'
story is legitimate. No way would a room full of
Combat vets allow this one shooter to get off over 100
rounds! And, it is not normal for the outside security
guards to be there. They are at the MP station, and at
the main gates. This means the room full of soldiers
processing must have been pinned down; multiple
shooters is the only plausible scenario. this sounds
like MAJ Hasan has been used, and perhaps is a patsy.
--SFC Donald Buswell (Retired)
•CNN: Over one hundred shots were fired in the attack.
(Logic dictates that 'over one hundred shots' were not
fired by a single individual, surrounded by military
personnel and special police forces.)
•CNN: FBI was investigating Major Nidal Hasan six
months ago.
•Curiouser and Curiouser: -Video surfaces of alleged
shooter, Major Nidal Hasan, attending Homeland
Security Task Force conference --Major Hasan's name
appears on page 29 of The George Washington University
Homeland Security Policy Institute's 'Thinking
Anew—Security Priorities for the Next Administration'
--Proceedings Report of the HSPI Presidential
Transition Task Force - April 2008 - January 2009. The
report is dated 19 May 2009.
•Numerous media accounts: Major Hasan's neighbors,
medical trainers, colleagues, friends, cousin, uncle,
grandfather- - even the store owner to where he bought
his food -- all heap praise on Major Hasan's
temperament. This appears to be psy-ops, six ways to
Sunday. --LRP
•The alleged shooter received his medical degree from
the military's Uniformed Services University of the
Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., in 2001 and is a
graduate of Virginia Tech. Early on Thursday, he
showed no signs of worry or stress when he stopped at
7-Eleven for his daily breakfast of hash browns, said
Jeannie Strickland, the store's manager. "He came in
(Thursday) morning just like normal," she said,
"nothing weird, nothing out of the ordinary."
Lawyer asks investigators not to question Hasan 09 Nov
2009 A lawyer for the Army psychiatrist accused in a
deadly shooting spree at Fort Hood said Monday he
asked investigators not to question his client and
expressed doubt that the suspect would be able to get
a fair trial, given the widespread attention to the
case. Retired Col. John P. Galligan said he was
contacted Monday by Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan's family
and was headed to an Army hospital in San Antonio to
meet Hasan. "Until I meet with him, it's best to say
we're just going to protect all of his rights,"
Galligan said... Galligan questioned whether Hasan
could get a fair trial in either criminal or military
court, given President Barack Obama's planned visit to
the base on Tuesday and public comments by the post
commander, Lt. Gen. Robert Cone.
Hasan Computer Reveals No Terror Ties 09 Nov 2009 A
preliminary review of the computer of Maj. Nidal Malik
Hasan, the accused shooter in Thursday's rampage at
Fort Hood in which 13 people were killed, has revealed
no evidence of any connection to terror groups or
conspirators, according to law enforcement officials.
CBS News reports that an examination of the computer
has revealed Hasan visited Web sites promoting radical
Islamic views, but investigators have not found any
e-mail communications with outside facilitators or
known terrorists.
But, looky here! Officials: U.S. Aware of Hasan
Efforts to Contact 'al Qaeda' --Army Major in Fort
Hood Massacre Used 'Electronic Means' to Connect with
Terrorists 09 Nov 2009 U.S. intelligence agencies were
aware months ago that Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan was
attempting to make contact with people associated with
al Qaeda [al-CIAduh], two American officials briefed
on classified material in the case told ABC News. It
is not known whether the intelligence agencies
informed the Army that one of its officers was seeking
to connect with suspected al Qaeda figures, the
officials said.
Soldier Found With 100 Pounds of C-4 Released From
Jail --The ATF, FBI and Montgomery County Bomb Squad
investigated the case, trying to determine whether the
explosives came from Fort Campbell. 05 Nov 2009 An
Army Special Forces soldier who admitted to police
that he was stockpiling military-grade explosives
outside his home near Fort Campbell was released from
jail into the custody of his wife. U.S. Magistrate
Judge Cliff Knowles gave the order releasing
25-year-old Sgt. 1st Class Timothy Ryan Richards
during a detention hearing Thursday in federal court
in Nashville. He was charged with possessing two
unregistered automatic weapons but he has not yet
entered a plea.
Soldier Arrested After C-4 Explosives, Unregistered
Guns Found At Home --The explosives were found in
crates. 02 Nov 2009 An Army Special Forces soldier has
been arrested following the discovery of 100 pounds of
explosives at his Tennessee home in Montgomery County.
Timothy Ryan Richards appeared in federal court Monday
in Nashville on charges of possessing two unregistered
guns. Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent
Eric Kehn said he expects Richards will face more
charges related to the discovery of the explosives.. .
The house is located near the Fort Campbell, Ky., Army
post where the solider is based.
Fort Hood shooting suspect conscious, talking,
hospital says 09 Nov 2009 Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, the
suspect in last week's mass shooting at the Fort Hood
Army Post, is conscious and talking, according to a
spokesman for the Army hospital where he is being
treated. On Sunday, Hasan was listed in critical but
stable condition and in intensive care at Brooke Army
Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas.
Fort Hood shooting suspect's ties to mosque
investigated --The FBI and Army are looking into
whether Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan had an association with
militants at the Virginia mosque where two 9/11
'hijackers' prayed, a source says. 09 Nov 2009 The FBI
and the Army on Sunday were investigating whether the
military psychiatrist suspected in the Ft. Hood
shooting rampage had an association with militants at
a mosque in Virginia or in cyberspace. A senior
federal law enforcement official said there was no
immediate evidence of such a link, nor of any direct
connection between the suspected gunman, Army Maj.
Nidal Malik Hasan, 39, and terrorist groups or
individuals, either in person or online.
Are you ready? Wait for it... it's good: Fort Hood
shooting: Texas army killer linked to September 11
terrorists --Major Nidal Malik Hasan worshipped at a
mosque led by a radical imam said to be a "spiritual
adviser" to three of the hijackers who attacked
America on Sept 11, 2001. 07 Nov 2009 Hasan, the sole
suspect in the ['Manchurian Candidate'-style] massacre
of 13 fellow US soldiers in Texas, attended the
controversial Dar al-Hijrah mosque in Great Falls,
Virginia, in 2001 at the same time as two of the
September 11 terrorists, The Sunday Telegraph has
learnt. His mother's funeral was held there in May
that year. The preacher at the time was Anwar al-Awlaki,
an American-born Yemeni scholar who was banned from
addressing a meeting in London by video link in August
because he is accused of supporting attacks on British
troops and backing terrorist organisations.
Report: Suspected Fort Hood shooter prayed at same
mosque as 9/11 terrorists 08 Nov 2009 Major Nidal
Malik Hasan, the U.S. Army psychiatrist accused of
shooting dead 13 people and wounding 30 others in Fort
Hood, Texas, prayed at the same mosque as two of the
September 11 terrorists, according to a report
published in the Sunday Telegraph. Hasan attended the
Dar al-Hijrah mosque in Great Falls, Virginia, in
2001, at the same time as the two terrorists, and the
FBI may investigate whether Hasan met them, the
Telegraph reported.
U.S. Army gunman's act "impossible" - grandfather 07
Nov 2009 The grandfather of a U.S. Army psychiatrist
accused of shooting dead 13 people and wounding 30
others at a base in Texas said on Saturday he found it
impossible to believe his grandson had committed the
act. "He is a doctor and loves the U.S." Ismail
Mustafa Hamad told Reuters in an interview at his home
in the Palestinian town of al-Bireh. "America made him
what he is."
Army: Shooting Suspect Taken Off Ventilator --Army
officials: Hasan is 'not able to converse.' 07 Nov
2009 A U.S. Army spokesman says the man authorities
say went on a shooting spree at Fort Hood has been
taken off a ventilator but still remains in intensive
care at a military hospital. Spokesman Col. John Rossi
told reporters on Saturday at Fort Hood that he is not
sure if Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan is able to communicate.
Hasan was shot during an exchange of gunfire during
Thursday's attack. The military moved him on Friday to
Brooke Medical Center in San Antonio, about 150 miles
southwest of Fort Hood. Army officials have said Hasan
is "not able to converse."
Nidal Malik Hasan, Suspected Fort Hood Shooter, Was
Called "Camel Jockey" --Fort Hood Shooting Suspect
Harassed By Others In Military and Wanted Out, Family
Said 06 Nov 2009 Fort Hood shooting suspect, Major
Nidal Malik Hasan, wanted out of the Army after being
constantly harassed by others in the military and was
called a "camel jockey," his family said. As Hasan was
about to be deployed to Iraq Afghanistan, he was
suffering from some of the same stresses that he was
trained as an Army psychiatrist to treat. Although the
39-year-old had just been promoted to major in May,
his family says he had hired a lawyer to help him get
out of the Armed Forces.
Second Gunman In Custody At Army's Fort Hood -Report
06 Nov 2009 A second gunman is in custody after a
shooting at the Army's Fort Hood in Texas in which at
least seven people were killed and 12 wounded, reports
KCEN-TV of Waco. The report comes about two hours
after a first suspect was captured, shortly after
gunfire broke out. Authorities say the gunmen were
dressed in fatigues, though it's not confirmed whether
they are military personnel. It's also not known if
the victims were military personnel or civilians.
•Video: Alleged Fort Hood Shooter Major Hasan At
Homeland Security Task Force conference --Hasan's
name, as Task Force member, appears on page 29 of The
George Washington University Homeland Security Policy
Institute's 'Thinking Anew—Security Priorities for the
Next Administration
•White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said earlier that
officials were monitoring the incident in the
Situation Room. The Department of Homeland Security
said it was in the process of obtaining information.
•Alleged shooter is alive, in stable condition
--General Bob Cone:
•Terror attack 'not ruled out'
•The alleged shooter graduated from Virginia Tech
--His cousin, Nader Hasan, actually laughed in an
interview when asked if alleged shooter, Nadal Hasan,
was 'violent.' He never went to Iraq.
•Attack appears to have been carried out by multiple
shooters. Two suspects are no longer in custody, but a
third person has been picked up for questioned.
•Sources say Army shooting suspect was due to be
deployed to Iraq
•42 people shot by Army psychiatrist, promoted to Army
Major in May. 12 killed; 30 wounded --US Official:
Shooter was Major Malik Nadal Hasan
•'The individuals arrested are all US soldiers.'
Surviving Fort
Hood shooting suspect arrested at golf course, officer
says Updated 2334 GMT 05 Nov 2009 A senior officer who
was playing golf Thursday near Fort Hood, Texas, told
CNN he witnessed the arrest of one of the two
surviving suspects of the shooting at the Army
installation. Shortly after the shooting, the officer
said, military police told him to clear the course and
he saw other MPs surround the building that held the
golf carts, he said. The senior officer said he ducked
into a nearby house for cover as 30 to 40 cars
carrying MPs approached. He said he saw a soldier in
battle-dress uniform, his hands in the air. The MPs
ordered him to lie on the ground and open his uniform,
presumably to ensure he was not carrying explosives,
the senior officer said. He said an MP told him that
authorities considered the man to be a suspect in the
shootings after having overheard the man say he was
with the shooter. The man was surrounded for 25 to 30
minutes, until a convoy of vehicles arrived, led by a
Ford Crown Victoria and carrying men in suits, and he
was taken away, the senior officer said.
Fort Hood gunman [allegedly] shouted 'Allahu Akbar' as
he opened fire --Army psychiatrist remains on
ventilator after rampage that killed 13 people and
wounded 28 06 Nov 2009 A US army psychiatrist about to
be deployed to Afghanistan allegedly shouted "Allahu
Akbar", or "God is greatest", as he opened fire at a
military base in Texas, killing 13 people and wounding
28. The gunman, Major Nidal Malik Hasan, 39, shouted
the Arabic phrase just before he began his shooting
spree at Fort Hood military installation yesterday,
according to the base commander, Lieutenant General
Robert Cone.
Details emerge about Fort Hood suspect's history 06
Nov 2009 Army psychiatrist Nidal Malik Hasan, suspect
in the assault that killed 13 people at Fort Hood,
Texas, and hurt 30, salved the emotional wounds of
troops returning from war even as he objected to his
own looming deployment to Afghanistan, where he was to
counsel soldiers suffering from stress... Hasan
recently was involved in a spat with another Fort Hood
soldier residing in his apartment complex, apparently
related to his Muslim beliefs. The manager of the
complex, John Thompson, said the other soldier, John
Van de Walker, allegedly keyed Hasan's car and also
removed and tore up a bumper sticker that read "Allah
is Love." Thompson said Van de Walker had been in Iraq
and was upset to learn that Hasan was Muslim. A report
filed with Killeen police on Aug. 16 indicates that
Hasan's vehicle, a 2006 Honda Civic, had been
scratched by an unknown object causing an estimated
$1,000 worth of damage. The report indicates that Van
de Walker, 30, was arrested on Oct. 21 and charged
with criminal mischief.
Death toll rises to 13 in Ft. Hood shootings --Army
officials confirmed that the alleged gunman, Maj.
Nidal Malik Hasan, was due to be deployed overseas.
Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, was shot by a police
officer and is hospitalized. 06 Nov 2009 As
authorities continue to search for clues on what
prompted the shooting Thursday at Ft. Hood, the death
toll rose today to 13. Twenty-eight of the 31 people
injured in the attack on the nation's largest military
base remain hospitalized. The alleged shooter, an Army
psychiatrist who was wounded during the attack, is
also hospitalized, unconscious and on a ventilator.
Officers raid Texas home of suspect in Fort Hood
shootings 06 Nov 2009 Officers raided the apartment of
the soldier suspected in the shootings at Fort Hood,
Texas, early Friday, searching for clues as to what
caused the military psychiatrist to allegedly gun down
soldiers he had taken an oath to help, a police
spokeswoman said. The alleged gunman, identified as
Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, opened fire at a military
processing center at Fort Hood, killing 13 and
wounding 30 others, Lt. Gen. Robert Cone said... In
the nearby town of Killeen, a SWAT team and FBI agents
were searching Hasan's apartment to help determine
what caused the shooting, which military experts
called the worst mass shooting at an American military
base, Carol Smith, a Killeen police spokeswoman, said
early Friday.
Surveillance video shows Fort Hood suspect before
shootings 06 Nov 2009 An owner of a 7-Eleven
convenience store in Fort Hood, Texas, said Maj. Nidal
Malik Hasan came in for coffee and hashbrowns most
mornings, including the day he allegedly shot dozens
of soldiers. Surveillance video from the store
obtained by CNN shows a man who, according to the
store owner, is Hasan at the cashier's counter at
about 6:20 a.m. Thursday (7:20 a.m. ET) -- about seven
hours before the mass shooting. "He looked normal,
came in had his hashbrowns and coffee as you see in
the surveillance video," the owner told CNN. Another
surveillance video from the store on Tuesday showed
the man believed to be Hasan in scrubs... In 2009,
Hasan he completed a fellowship in disaster and
preventive psychiatry and was assigned to Darnall in
July. He had been awarded the National Defense Service
Medal, the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal and
the Army Service Ribbon, but was never deployed
outside the United States.
Motive a mystery after Fort Hood rampage --12 die;
gunman remain hospitalized, despite earlier reports 06
Nov 2009 An Army psychiatrist about to be deployed to
a combat zone overseas allegedly shot and killed 12
people and wounded 31 in a rampage at this sprawling
military post north of Austin on Thursday afternoon.
Post officials originally said that the suspected
shooter -- Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan -- had been killed,
but late in the day said he was wounded and in
critical condition at a nearby hospital... Hasan is
accused of attacking his fellow soldiers about 1:30
p.m. at the Soldier Readiness Processing Center. Armed
with two pistols, he shot more than 40 people before
military police and civilian police officers
responded, officials said. He was wounded by a
civilian policewoman, who was injured in the exchange,
police said. Officials had reported earlier that the
police officer had been killed. Hasan's motives were
unclear, and early on Thursday, he showed no signs of
worry or stress when he stopped at 7-Eleven for his
daily breakfast of hash browns, said Jeannie
Strickland, the store's manager. "He came in
(Thursday) morning just like normal," she said,
"nothing weird, nothing out of the ordinary." A few
hours later, officials said, the Virginia native began
his rampage on the post.
Counter-terror plans will be revised to reflect Fort
Hood and Afghan attacks [Wow, that was quick!] 05 Nov
2009 (UK) A soldier turning on his comrades at Fort
Hood, an Afghan policeman killing the British soldiers
who trained him - two uncannily similar events in two
days, but incidents which, across the Western world,
security authorities have been planning for and
dreading. Since the Mumbai attacks counter-terrorism
planning has seen a major shift. The shootings in
Afghanistan and Fort Hood carry echoes of the attacks
in India with the added danger that the enemy has come
from within.
AP: Authorities Had Concerns About Suspect Over
Internet Postings [Wow, that was quick, too!] 05 Nov
2009 Federal law enforcement officials say the
suspected Fort Hood, Texas, shooter had come to their
attention at least six months ago because of Internet
postings that discussed suicide bombings and other
threats. The officials say the postings appeared to
have been made by Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, who was
killed during the shooting incident that left least 11
others dead and 31 wounded... The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to discuss the case. One of the Web
postings that authorities reviewed is a blog that
equates suicide bombers with a soldier throwing
himself on a grenade to save the lives of his
comrades.
Suspected Fort Hood gunman graduated from Virginia
Tech 05 Nov 2009 The Army psychiatrist suspected of
carrying a shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, was
born in Virginia and graduated from Virginia Tech
University, where he was a member of the ROTC and
earned a bachelor's degree in biochemistry in 1997.
Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan had come to the attention of
authorities six months ago because of Internet
postings that discussed suicide bombings and other
threats, law enforcement officials said Thursday... He
received his medical degree from the military's
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
in Bethesda, Md., in 2001. He did his internship,
residency and a fellowship at Walter Reed.
Twelve dead as US soldiers go on shooting rampage at
Fort Hood military base in Texas 05 Nov 2009 At least
12 people have been killed and more than 30 injured
after three US soldiers went on a shooting rampage at
the Fort Hood military base in Texas. The Army says
one of the gunmen has been killed and two others
apprehended and all of the gunmen are US soldiers.
Lieutenant General Bob Cone: "A shooter opened fire.
That person was killed. At this time, we are looking
at 12 dead and 31 wounded. They are dispersed among
the local hospitals in this area in Texas. "The
shooter was killed. He was a soldier. We since then
have apprehended two additional soldiers who are
suspects, and I would go into the point that there
were eyewitness accounts that there may have been more
than one shooter." The massacre happened at a training
centre on the sprawling grounds of the largest US
military base in the world. One gunman was caught
quickly but the others went on the run. Four police
officers were shot and wounded before they were
arrested. Eyewitnesses said the gunmen were dressed in
military uniforms.
12 dead, 30 injured in shootings at Fort Hood --Army
psychiatrist was gunman in Texas incident, military
officials tell NBC 05 Nov 2009 An Army psychiatrist
opened fire Thursday at Fort Hood, Texas, killing 12
people and wounding 30 others before being shot to
death, officials told NBC News. Eleven of the victims
died at the scene, military officials said. A 12th
died later at a hospital, NBC station KCEN-TV of Waco
reported.
12 Dead, 31 Wounded in Base Shootings 06 Nov 2009 At
least 12 people were killed and 31 wounded Thursday
afternoon in a shooting at a military installation in
Fort Hood, Texas, according to military spokesmen. Lt.
General Bob Cone said in Texas that the shooter was an
Army soldier who opened fire in a "readiness
facility." Lt. Gen. Cone confirmed that the shooter
had been killed. Two other Army soldiers were in
custody as suspects. President Obama said it was
"horrifying" that American soldiers would face such a
situation at home.
Fort Hood death toll now at 12; gunmen were U.S.
soldiers 05 Nov 2009 At least 12 people have been
killed and 31 wounded in a shooting at Fort Hood Army
Base near Killeen, Texas, when at least one gunmen
opened fire on soldiers who were making their final
deployment preparations. Lt. Gen. Bob Cone, the
commander of III Corps, said that at least one gunman
opened fire at the base's Soldiers Readiness
Processing Center where soldiers were receiving
medical and dental exams prior to deployment. The
gunman's fire was returned -- Cone did not say by whom
-- and the gunman was killed. Two other soldiers who
may have participated in the shootings were arrested
in nearby buildings, Cone said. At least one of the
dead was a civilian police officer working at the
base.
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