The Daily - The Trial of a Navy SEAL Chief

Episode Date: July 8, 2019

The trial of Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher, a decorated member of the Navy SEALs, offered rare insight into a culture that is, by design, difficult to penetrate. Our colleague tells us wha...t he learned from the verdict. Guest: Dave Philipps, who covers the military for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: After a key witness for prosecutors changed his story on the stand, Chief Gallagher was found not guilty of the most serious charges against him, including the first-degree murder of a captive ISIS fighter and attempted murder of civilians in Iraq.Some SEAL commanders expressed worry that the verdict would discourage others from reporting possible war crimes in the future.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily. Today, the trial of Navy SEAL Chief Edward Gallagher offered rare insight into a culture that is, by design, difficult to penetrate. Dave Phillips, who covers the military for The Times, on what he learned from the verdict. It's Monday, July 8th. Dave, the last time we talked, you told us about the allegations against Navy Chief Edward Gallagher, just as his case was heading into trial. Remind us what those allegations were.
Starting point is 00:00:49 So this is a guy who had served almost 20 years in the Marines and the Navy SEALs and had eight deployments and a chest full of commendations for heroic actions. And on his latest deployment to Iraq, he was turned in by his own men. And what they said is that while they were in Iraq, he shot at civilians with a sniper rifle. Specifically, he shot down a young girl in a flowered hijab, and he shot down an old man trying to get water from the river. And then perhaps most striking is a teenage ISIS captive came into their base and they were treating him for wounds he had gotten in a battle. And what his men say is Chief Gallagher came up and without really any explanation, stabbed the teenager in the neck several times and killed him. So essentially, these are allegations of war crimes, and they're being brought by his own subordinates. Right, which is super unusual. The SEALs are not only secretive, most of their missions are literally classified, but they're also a very tight brotherhood where it's considered
Starting point is 00:01:57 to be pretty taboo to go outside of the tribe and report what happened, especially overseas. And to me, what I quickly learned was there was this really big and kind of existential schism within the SEALs between a group that calls themselves the pirates. These are the rogues, the old school dudes who really value their skills as war fighters and the other folks, which I think the pirates call the Boy Scouts, people that see their role as elite commandos is absolutely dependent on transparency and rule of law. And so there was a big clash, you know, who is going to prevail in this culture, the guys who want to do anything that they feel is necessary to get the job done,
Starting point is 00:02:43 or the guys who want accountability and want the rule of law. So tell us about the lead up to this trial. The prosecution thinks they've got a great case. They have text messages from the chief's seized phone. In the first text message, he gets a custom made knife from a former Navy SEAL who made it for him. And he texts back, thanks. I can't wait to bury this in somebody's skull. Then they have the eyewitness
Starting point is 00:03:13 testimony of two Navy SEALs who say they witnessed the chief stab this ISIS prisoner who was about 15 years old in the neck. Then you have even more SEALs who later that day witnessed a meeting in which most of this detachment of the platoon confronted their chief and said what you did was wrong. And he admits to it saying, I'm sorry, I thought you guys would be cool with it. I won't do it again where you guys can see it. And finally, they have two text messages after the fact where the chief texts pictures of himself holding up the body of the dead ISIS fighter by the hair with his knife next to him saying, good story behind this one. I got him with my hunting knife. So essentially you have him saying he's going to do it. You have
Starting point is 00:04:05 people saying they saw him do it. And you have him sending pictures to other SEALs saying, look at what I just did. So it sounds like an open and shut case. But there are problems that start to emerge. There are several SEALs that are planning to testify, and slowly pressure starts to build on them from the SEAL community, both active duty and veterans. You know, saying things like, we don't believe you, Chief Gallagher has a great reputation, he's a real SEAL, you guys are traitors. These threats were threats to their careers as SEALs, threats to their safety. When warfighters whose job it is to perpetrate violence make those threats against other warfighters, they take it very seriously. And so they start to remember less.
Starting point is 00:05:00 They start to tell the prosecutors they're not so sure what they saw. They start to get lawyers who tell the prosecutor, sorry, my client is no longer interested in talking to you. So this pirate mentality is starting to prevail even before the trial is really underway. Absolutely. OK, so what happens when this trial actually begins? Today in shackles, Navy SEAL Chief Edward Gallagher walked into court. Cheered by supporters who called him a hero, but accused by the military of being a war criminal. So the court-martial is convened at Naval Base San Diego, and the courtroom is literally steps from these huge rows of
Starting point is 00:05:46 hulking gray battleships and cruisers. And the courtroom doesn't look all that different from any municipal courtroom, but the jury definitely does. So under the military justice rules, the jury that judges you has to be the same rank or senior. In fact, they were able to pick a panel that was almost all enlisted career Marines. And in this day and age, that meant that they had done, you know, multiple tours on the ground in Afghanistan and Iraq. And that was really a conscious effort by the defense. They wanted people who had been on the ground in combat. I think that they thought that they would see Chief Gallagher through the most sympathetic eyes.
Starting point is 00:06:35 And so what's the case that the prosecution makes to this jury? The prosecution starts out the trial with its strongest witnesses, SEALs who were there on the ground on the day in Mosul, Iraq, where they say the chief stabbed and killed this ISIS fighter. And they start to tell the story of this chaotic battle where the SEALs are on the edge of the city sort of directing things, helping the Iraqi partner forces fight ISIS. And they get some radio intelligence that there's a farmhouse full of ISIS fighters. And an American helicopter
Starting point is 00:07:13 launches two missiles at this house and levels it. The only one surviving is this teenage fighter, and he gets brought in to the SEAL base. Now, what was astounding, and I didn't know going in, is that Chief Gallagher was not at the base that morning. He was actually two or three miles away. He was on the front in a gun truck helping the Iraqis. Chief Gallagher is the highest enlisted person in the SEAL platoon. His job is to oversee all the tactics. In a sense, he's the coach of the basketball team with his clipboard and his X's and O's, right?
Starting point is 00:07:51 There is an active battle going on. SEALs are engaged in that battle. But people testify that when he hears it's actually an ISIS captive, he says, no one touch him. He's mine. And he then drives two or three miles back away from the fight to their outpost to see this fighter. Everybody agrees about that. But then two SEALs testify that Chief Gallagher, for no clear reason, for reasons that even when pressed on the stand, they couldn't offer any insight into. Chief Gallagher, for no clear reason, for reasons that even when pressed on the stand, they couldn't offer any insight into, Chief Gallagher pulls out this custom knife and stabs the fighter
Starting point is 00:08:33 repeatedly in the neck. Wow. So this sounds like incredibly damning testimony. What reason would there be to not believe these SEALs who say that they saw this happen? So there's this story that's been told over and over, first by Chief Gallagher's wife. There's no way to describe what it looks like to be maliciously lied about, to be at the end of a game of telephone that now has resulted in my husband's life is on the line. And Chief Gallagher's brother. The malicious and slanderous lies emanate from two people that we know. We know who they are. We know why they're telling these stories.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Then by members of Congress. So let's say that Chief Gallagher killed a verified, designated ISIS combatant. My answer is, so what? That's his job. And finally, by the defense in the courtroom. And the story is this. This is not actually a murder case. It's a mutiny that Chief Gallagher's underlings decided they didn't like him. And what the defense says is they decided they didn't like him over small things, that he was too hard on them, that he was taking them on missions they thought were too dangerous. A defense attorney described them as, quote, entitled millennials, unquote. And he made a big deal about how whiny they were about how he was
Starting point is 00:09:59 taking their beef jerky and their power bars without asking. And the defense's theory is that because of these small slights, a group of SEALs in the platoon decided, we're going to get rid of Chief Gallagher. First, they started telling their commanders about little problems, and that didn't get rid of Chief Gallagher. So they made up something bigger and bigger until it was a murder charge, and by then they had lost control. And this case started and there was nothing they could do. The prosecution basically ignored this whole theory because they had confidence in their eyewitnesses. But then all of that changed.
Starting point is 00:10:42 Their star witness was a medic named Corey Scott. And he was important because he had been right at the head of this ISIS captive the whole time that they were treating him. He not only saw everything, he had the medical training to describe it and describe watching this ISIS captive die. And he had told Navy investigators and prosecutors repeatedly about this in detail. So they had saved him as sort of the nail to put this whole eyewitness scene in place. And so he comes up on the stand. He looks over at Chief Gallagher, and he starts to go through his testimony of this scene where this barely conscious fighter was brought in. They sedated him. They put an emergency breathing tube in his throat, and then they
Starting point is 00:11:41 started treating his collapsed lung. But when he gets to the part where the chief suddenly stabs the fighter in the neck, he starts to hem and haw, where he had told investigators he stabbed him two or three times. He says, well, I only saw him stab him once, and I'm not sure how deep it went. I didn't even see any blood. I don't think those wounds would have killed him. He just seemed stable after that. And then I waited stood up for cross-examination and was ready and asked essentially, what do you mean you stayed around until he asphyxiated? Did Chief Gallagher kill this man? The medic said, no. And he said, how do you know?
Starting point is 00:12:42 And the medic said, because I killed him. Wow. And he said, how do you know? And the medic said, because I killed him. I put my thumb over his breathing tube and I suffocated him. The medic says that he killed the captain. That's right. And because before the trial, the medic had been given testimonial immunity, he couldn't be punished for anything he said on the stand, even murder. And he looked at Chief Gallagher and he said, I'm the one who did it. Dave, what are you thinking as you hear this? How are you making sense of this? What is this? The first thing that comes in my head is this is not supposed to happen. This is what happens in every TV court show you've ever seen, but it never actually happens in court. This is the type of perjury, take the fall at any cost type of behavior you see in a gang trial, not in the trial of elite commandos. And so everybody in the courtroom was
Starting point is 00:13:41 shocked. And I wonder what Gallagher's reaction was. So this is what's interesting, and I don't know what to make of it. But that day, Edward Gallagher chose to bring his children into the courtroom. They had never been there before. They were never there since. But his wife, his children, his brother, his parents were there to hear this testimony. Are you suggesting that the defense and Gallagher may have known that this was going to happen, that this was somehow coordinated? He anticipated a kind of exoneration.
Starting point is 00:14:14 The lead defense attorney insists that that is not true. But there were several signs from me sitting in the courtroom that I saw that suggested to me that something larger was at play. The presence of his family, the extended eye contact between the medic on the stand, the defense attorneys, and Chief Gallagher. The fact that the defense attorney was so ready on this cross-examination, he didn't seem shocked at all about any of this testimony. It all seemed to have a very choreographed nature. And that day, I talked to a few SEALs in the platoon, and I said, how could this happen? Did you know about this? And they said to me, we're just as shocked as you are. The medic never said anything about this to us.
Starting point is 00:15:05 And one of them said to me, I think the pressure got to him. I can't imagine how panicked the prosecution is in this moment. They've lost their star witness. Furthermore, the star witness, it feels like it's taken the fall. What does that look like in the courtroom? Well, what is more telling is not how it looks in the courtroom, because I think they did a very good job of holding things together. But outside of the courtroom, there are people on their witness list who they have scheduled to call, and now they realize they can't trust. Because if this medic says this, who knows what the other guys are going to say. And so the medic is essentially the last witness to the stabbing they call. The others that they have, they leave on ice because they're afraid of what will happen.
Starting point is 00:15:54 So they're starting to wonder if there's been a wholesale flip by their witnesses. Yeah. Yeah. The defense attorney asked, why would you admit to this killing? And he looked at Chief Gallagher and said, because he's got a wife and a family, and I didn't want him to spend his whole life in prison. And I think that there are guys who looked at this and said, yeah, he killed that ISIS fighter, but do I want to stand up there and put him away and take the heat for that? And the answer for
Starting point is 00:16:21 some of them was no. So what's the impact of this kind of shocking turn in the trial? Well, the prosecution still had a shred of hope because when the medic testified that he was the murderer, he also said, yes, I saw Edward Gallagher stab this captive in the neck. And so I think they thought that that helped their case to the extent that if there wasn't a murder here, there was at least a stabbing. And the jury in this case, they not only have discretion in what charge to convict him of, but unlike civilian juries, they get to pick the punishment. So they have a maximum, but they have no minimum. They could convict him of murder and foreseeably sentence him to no punishment. So they go in really with complete freedom, not only decide what happened
Starting point is 00:17:13 and what is he guilty of doing, but how should he be reprimanded for that? Those are all questions that as they go into deliberations, they get to answer with none of us in the room to see what happened. We'll be right back. Dave, what was the scene in the courtroom as the jury prepares to announce its verdict? We figured we'd be in for days of deliberations. But just a few hours later, after a total of eight hours of deliberation, we get a frantic text from a Navy spokesman that the verdict is in. In the courtroom, Chief Gallagher is sitting there with his dress whites, with his gold trident on, and the jury comes in,
Starting point is 00:18:14 and they start reading off the seven counts. Not guilty of murder. Not guilty of attempted murder. Not guilty of obstruction of justice. The only thing that he was guilty of was murder, not guilty of obstruction of justice. The only thing that he was guilty of was the most minor charge, which is that he showed behavior prejudicial to good order and discipline
Starting point is 00:18:35 by posing with the dead body of the ISIS fighter. So according to this jury, he is guilty only of posing for a photo with a dead man who, according to this verdict, it would seem the medic killed, not Gallagher. That's right. And the next morning he was sentenced. They reduced him in rank one level. They docked a little bit of his pay.
Starting point is 00:18:59 They sentenced him to four months in prison, which was automatically wiped clean because of his prior time in the brig. And he left. He left and essentially went back to life as a SEAL. A free man. A free man. And he's still a Navy SEAL. Right. And for the first time, we get to hear from him.
Starting point is 00:19:20 Here's a man who sat silently during his whole testimony. Never testified. Never spoke to the media, never released any statements before trial. And early, early the next morning, he gets together with his family and his lawyers for a live shot with Fox & Friends, which has been his biggest supporter for months. for months. Well, let's right now bring in for his first exclusive interview, Navy SEAL operations chief Eddie Gallagher, his wife, Andrea, and attorney Tim Parlatore. Thank you all for joining us. And we finally get to hear from him and what his take on this whole thing is. I just want to say that I feel completely grateful and blessed. He just wants to say one thing. A new normal. Eddie, what's your message, briefly, to future Navy SEALs, guys who would wear that trident, who would go do the things
Starting point is 00:20:11 you've done? Are we giving them rules of engagement? Are we empowering them the way we need to, to go defeat our enemies? I would say, so on rules of engagement, I'm not going to speak on rules of engagement or anything that overseas. I'm going to leave that to the people that are fighting the fight over there. And you know, the rules of engagement are there. But I would say the future Navy SEALs, you know, loyalty is a trait that seems to be lost. I would say bring that back. You're part of a brotherhood.
Starting point is 00:20:54 Remember, you know, you're there to watch your brother's back. He's there to watch your back. And just stay loyal. Stay loyal. Loyalty and honesty. And honesty. Dave, have you spoken to any of the SEALs who made the decision to testify against their commander since the verdict. Because I have to wonder what they're thinking now, that after all that, Gallagher is essentially the one
Starting point is 00:21:29 whose narrative has won out. Yeah, I've spoken to a handful, yes. And what do they say? They're sad. They're disappointed. They have seen friends change their testimony or others back out. A lot of them made sacrifices that now seem to have been, they feel, for nothing.
Starting point is 00:21:51 But I think that the general feeling was, well, what else different could we have done? If you had witnessed what we witnessed, what would you do? And I don't think that they regret they did it. They just now have to live with the aftermath. Well, so what is going to happen to those SEALs who testified against Gallagher? That's a really open question. I think for the larger SEAL community, it was really a lesson. A lesson that it's very costly to come out and speak about something.
Starting point is 00:22:26 A number of these guys either damage their careers or irreparably damage their reputations. They'll have a very hard road ahead if they choose to stay in the SEALs. How much of this comes down to the medic and to what he claimed happened? the medic and to what he claimed happened? Or do you think that this jury of Gallagher's military peers would have been so sympathetic to him anyway, that it would have been a verdict like it was? In the military, the jury is not allowed to speak afterwards. So this is a question we can't answer. But you got to assume that if they believed the medic, then they would believe there was a stabbing. And they said that he was not guilty of a stabbing. So maybe the medic wasn't that important at all.
Starting point is 00:23:19 Maybe if he said, yes, I saw him stab and kill this man. Maybe if he said, yes, I saw him stab and kill this man, this jury of combat veterans, of senior enlisted guys who'd been on the ground multiple times, would have come to the same conclusion, that this guy deserves to go free. Thank you very much, Dave. Thank you. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. On Sunday, Iran said it would begin enriching uranium above the limits of the 2015 nuclear deal with the U.S. and its allies,
Starting point is 00:24:12 moving the country closer to being able to produce an atomic bomb. It was the latest provocation from Iran since the Trump administration withdrew from the nuclear deal and imposed a series of increasingly harsh sanctions against Iran. And. Now, was I wrong a few weeks ago to somehow give the impression to people
Starting point is 00:24:35 that I was praising those men who I successfully opposed time and again? Yes, I was. I regret it. Former Vice President Joe Biden has apologized for remarks in which he fondly recalled working with senators who supported segregation. I'm sorry for any of the pain or misconception they may have caused anybody. The apology came during a speech to a mostly black audience in South Carolina after weeks of criticism from fellow Democrats that Biden seemed to be condoning racist views.
Starting point is 00:25:17 But should that misstep define 50 years of my record for fighting for civil rights, racial justice in this country. I hope not. I don't think so. Finally. Rose up the middle. Looking, cutting, shooting, goal! Bravo to the U.S. The United States has won the Women's World Cup in a 2-0 victory over the Netherlands. During the tournament, the team became a symbol of a broader fight for gender equality after the players sued their employer, the U.S. Soccer Federation,
Starting point is 00:26:03 citing inferior wages and working conditions compared with the U.S. Soccer Federation, citing inferior wages and working conditions compared with the U.S. men's team. Following the team's victory, thousands of fans inside the stadium in France broke into chants of support for the lawsuit. Equal pay! Equal pay! That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Bavaro. See you tomorrow.

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