Young Black Soldier Hailed a Hero in Fort Hood Shooting

QueEx

Rising Star
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<font size="5"><center>Soldiers quick to act when bullets began to fly</font size><font size="4">

One repeatedly plunged into harm's way to help; now,
young Black Soldier Hailed a Hero in Fort Hood Shooting </font size></center>



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MCT - PFC Marquest Smith, 21, of Fort
Worth, Texas, discusses how he was
struck in the boot by a bullet during
the shooting spree yesterday at Fort
Hood, Texas. (Ron T. Ennis/Fort Worth
Star)




By Allen G. Breed
The Associated Press


FORT HOOD, Texas — Pfc. Marquest Smith, who was to head to Afghanistan in January, was completing routine paperwork about a bee-sting allergy when the sounds erupted.

A loud, popping noise. Moans. The sudden, urgent shout of "Gun!"

Smith poked his head over the cubicle's partition and saw an extraordinary sight: An Army officer with two guns, firing into the crowded room.


The 21-year-old Fort Worth native quickly grabbed the civilian worker who'd been helping with his paperwork and forced her under the desk. He lay low for several minutes, waiting for the shooter to run out of ammunition and wishing he, too, had a gun.

After the shooter stopped to reload, Smith made a run for it.

Pushing two other soldiers in front of him, he made it out of the Soldier Readiness Processing Center — only to plunge into the building twice more to help the wounded.

Smith had survived the worst mass shooting on a U.S. military base, a rampage of more than 100 shots that left 13 dead and 30 wounded, including the man accused of being the shooter, Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan.

It could have been much worse.


'No stranger to tragedy'

"Unfortunately, over the past eight years, our Army has been no stranger to tragedy," said a somber Gen. George Casey, Army chief of staff. "But we are an Army that draws strength from adversity. And hearing the stories of courage and heroism that I heard today makes me proud to be the leader of this great Army."

Home of the 1st Cavalry and 1st Army Division West, Fort Hood has seen more than its share of deployments and casualties in the past eight years.

At the processing center on the southern edge of the 100,000-acre base, soldiers returning from overseas mingled with colleagues filling out forms and undergoing medical tests in preparation for deployment.

Around 1:30 p.m., witnesses say, a man later identified as Hasan jumped on a desk and shouted the words "Allahu Akbar!" — Arabic for "God is great!" He was armed with two pistols, one a semiautomatic capable of firing up to 20 rounds without reloading.

Packed into cubicles with 5-foot-high dividers, the 300 unarmed soldiers were sitting ducks. Those who weren't hit by direct fire were struck by rounds ricocheting off the desks and tile floor.

When he decided Hasan wasn't close to being out of ammo, Smith made a dash for the door. He'd made it outside when he heard cries from within.

"I don't want to die."

"This really hurts."

"Help me get out of here."

Smith rushed back inside and found two wounded. He grabbed them by their collars and dragged them outside.

His second time through the door, he ran into the shooter, whose back was to him. Smith turned and fled, bullets whizzing by his head and hitting the walls as he rushed outside.​

From the first shots to the last, authorities say the whole incident lasted less than 10 minutes.

Pfc. Jeffrey Pearsall, 21, of Houston was waiting outside in the parking lot for Smith. He was talking to his brother on a cell phone when a group of soldiers ran out the door and a window shattered.

It was only then that he heard the gunshots.

He pulled his pickup truck forward, then hopped out and helped the wounded into the bed. He loaded as many as he could and sped off to the base hospital.


Doing My Job

Sources say that Smith is a graduate from Everman High School. In spite of several people calling him a hero, he humbly told reporters, “I just feel I was doing my job.”



http://www.modbee.com/local/story/924048.html
 
Hasan tells Fort Hood court-martial:​
'I am the shooter'​


FORT HOOD, Texas — An Army major facing the death penalty told a military court here Tuesday that he was the shooter in a 2009 rampage that killed 13 soldiers and that he acted after switching sides from U.S. goals.

In an opening statement that lasted less than two minutes, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan made his first comments at his court-martial on 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder for those killed and wounded in the Fort Hood attack of Nov. 5, 2009.

Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, could face life in prison or the death penalty if convicted.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"The evidence will clearly show that I am the shooter,"</span> said Hasan, who is acting as his own attorney in the case. "There's death and devastation for both sides, that is for both friend and foe, but the evidence presented at this trial will only show one side.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"The evidence will also show I was on the wrong side, that I then switched sides,"</span> said the bearded 42-year-old soldier, who is paralyzed from the waist down and confined to a wheelchair after being shot in the back by authorities as the shooting spree ended.

Hasan went on to describe mujahedin - the word used for fighters associated with radical Islam - as trying to establish "a perfect religion" in an imperfect world of those who want to stop them.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"I apologize for any mistakes I made in this endeavor,"</span> Hasan said.

Hasan spoke on the opening day of his court-martial after prosecutor Col. Steve Henricks described how the psychiatrist deliberately targeted his fellow soldiers and opened fire on them as he walked through a room with service members preparing to deploy to Afghanistan.

When Hasan entered the room, he told a civilian clerk to leave, to go another part of the building so just soldiers would be in range of his deadly onslaught, Henricks said.

"He then yelled, 'Allahu akbar!' and opened fire on unarmed, unsuspecting and defenseless soldiers," the prosecutor said. The cry, meaning "God is Great" in Arabic, is a frequent war cry of jihadists.

Hasan has sought to make his trial a political event, arguing that he opened fire as part of an attack designed to slow the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan and to protect members of the Taliban fighting there. The judge has resisted Hasan's effort.

Hasan, a Muslim born in the United States, is said by the government to have sent more than a dozen emails starting in December 2008 to Anwar Awlaki, a radical U.S.-born Islamic cleric killed during a U.S. drone stroke in Yemen in 2011.

Hasan has never denied shooting the soldiers. Many of the more than 30 service members wounded in the attack and some civilians inside the base's Soldier Readiness Processing Center are expected to testify.

"Evidence will show you Maj. Nidal Hasan was that gunman," said Henricks, who then described the attack in graphic detail, noting that Hasan was well-armed and continued firing.

Hasan planned and prepared "to kill as many soldiers as he could," Henricks said.


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/08/06/198637/hasan-tells-fort-hood-court-martial.html#storylink=cpy



 
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