US soldier jailed for Iraq offenses

Baghdad, November 22: A US soldier who abused fellow troops in Iraq and then lied about it was on Saturday sentenced to six months in jail, fined almost $6,000 and demoted, the American military said.

Sgt. Jarrett Taylor was one of four US soldiers, all members of B Troop, 2nd Squadron, 13th Cavalry Regiment, based out of Fort Bliss, Texas, who were charged with a range of offenses on Aug. 19.

Taylor, 23, was convicted at a court martial in Kuwait of cruelty and maltreatment and of making a false official statement, the military said. “He was sentenced to confinement for 180 days, reduction to the rank of Private E-1 (the lowest rank in the army), and forfeiture of $933 in pay for six months,” an army statement said.

Taylor, from Edmond, Oklahoma, faced four charges: two of cruelty and maltreatment, one charge of making false official statements, and another of reckless endangerment, according to the indictment issued in August.

The maximum penalty for those charges was eight years’ imprisonment. Taylor could also have been dishonorably discharged from the army and forced to forfeit all pay and allowances.

Of the three other soldiers charged alongside Taylor in August, Spc. Daniel Weber, 24, from Frankenmuth, Michigan, whose offenses were unspecified, was discharged in lieu of court martial, the statement said.

Staff Sgt. Bob Clements and Staff Sgt. Enoch Chatman are still awaiting trial, the military added.

Clements, 29, faces nine charges, including four counts of cruelty and maltreatment, three counts of making false official statements, one charge of reckless endangerment and one charge of impeding an investigation.

He faces a maximum penalty of 25 years in a military jail.

—–Agencies