|
Page 2 of 2 AMY GOODMAN: What was his name?  | | Lieutenant Tyson died as a result of wounds received during an ambush while on patrol in Balad | NADIA McCAFFREY: He's still in, so I’m not sure if I should say. His first name is Chris.
AMY GOODMAN: And his report was published, and he was named in the papers. NADIA McCAFFREY: Yes. Well, yeah. His name was Chris Murphy. He's a very nice young man. He didn't think -- he was 19 or 20 years old, you know -- if he acted. He lost Patrick. Patrick was his friend, like a dad figure, you know, and he protected him. When he got in trouble, Patrick would defend him, which he did with all the young soldiers, you know. AMY GOODMAN: Wasn't that why Patrick decided to go to Iraq? I mean, why did he join the military? And then, why did he decide to go to Iraq? They were two different decisions. NADIA McCAFFREY: Well, he did not want to go to Iraq at all. He enlisted after 9/11 to become a National Guard, and he wanted to do this because he reacted from, of course, the catastrophe of the Towers in the 9/11. And he didn’t [inaudible] he thought about it and he wanted to do something for his country. He wanted to help. He would have been here for Katrina. He would have -- you know, there was a fire between Shasta and Redding that burned for ten days [inaudible] last year. Nobody was there to stop the fire. It burned over 15,000 acres of woods and land, houses, you name it. People just left their home and let it burn. Now, Patrick would have been part of the National Guard to be there to stop the fire. And once he was in Iraq, well, he was deployed, anyway, of course. So once he was in Iraq, it took him a very short time to realize that, you know, that this was not at all what we said we were doing. And he said to me many times, not just one, but it didn't take long for him to admit and to say, “Mom, we shouldn't be here. We have nothing to do here. We are not fulfilling any of our promises to the people.” And he -- he lost his illusion. And because of that, after that, he turned to the children, the Iraqi children, and the soldiers. AMY GOODMAN: Now, the Army is saying that it was the Iraqi troops he was training that turned their guns on him and Andre. You got a video of the troops he was training? NADIA McCAFFREY: Yes. AMY GOODMAN: How did you get this? NADIA McCAFFREY: This, I didn't know I had it. And -- because we got Patrick's laptop just a little time after he was killed and returned home. I left that laptop the way it was for a long time, just looking at the pictures that came up. And then, this year, from his birthday actually, on May 26, I decided to maybe to burn some DVDs, because there was so much material on the laptop, and I was thinking, you know, if something happened to it, we’re going to lose it. So I decided to burn some DVDs. And somehow the whole process got stopped, so I tried to play with it a little bit and it started to work, and it did download into a DVD. And there was something I had never seen before. There was pre-training, pre-video training of Patrick training the Iraqis, shooting and doing some exercise. We see Patrick very clearly on the street. And I remember afterward that he told us, his wife and I, that he was going to send some DVDs home. We never got the DVDs. Well, I think this is the answer. They were -- didn’t have time to do it. AMY GOODMAN: Now, do you know who of these men killed your son, Patrick? NADIA McCAFFREY: No. I don't know exactly which one precisely, but I have -- I’m sure the men who killed him are in those three videos, yes. AMY GOODMAN: And I want to tell our listeners that you can go to our website at democracynow.org; for our viewers, we have been running the videotape that you got off of Patrick's computer. We've been running it through this broadcast. Again, our website is democracynow.org. Has anyone been taken into custody for the killing of Patrick and Andre? NADIA McCAFFREY: I’m not too sure. I was told by the general and the officer yesterday that there was one person in custody. But there is no name on it. I don't know yet. I really would like to know, because last year, I remember when the 579 came home, there was a gathering here at the house, and many of them were present. They say at the time that the sniper that shot at Patrick and came just at the last minutes of the shooting from behind the wall, well, you know, that sniper has disappeared from the military investigation. And this man was supposed to be arrested last year. Now, they also said that the man that they arrested was part of the shooting, but they also said there was a second man. And they think that second man is dead. I’m not sure. It doesn't make sense. Again, it doesn't fit with what I have heard last year and with what I’m hearing from them now. Also I confronted them with some details that really are not possible. The way the officer described the scene of the shooting is impossible. Why? Because the direction of Patrick's bullet wound, it's not right. It's just -- something is very wrong. So I’m not sure. I’m going to look into it. And I want to go do the second --, because the first investigation that was started has been closed. And now, they are reopening a second investigation, which is a criminal investigation. And it's not going to be the same people running it. AMY GOODMAN: Is Senator Boxer going to be calling for a hearing in the Senate? NADIA McCAFFREY: Yes. Oh, yes, she has been wonderful. AMY GOODMAN: Well, Nadia McCaffrey, I want it thank you very much for being with us. Nadia McCaffrey's son Patrick McCaffrey killed in Iraq, June 22, 2004. She learned on the second anniversary of his death that the Army had lied to her originally about how her son died. We will continue to follow this story.
Recommend this article...
Quote this article on your site | Views: 1015
Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.4.4 Tags: Patrick McCaffrey Army Lies to Mother of Slain Guardsman
|