2 US Navy SEALs suspected of killing an Army Green Beret could face the death penalty
Alex Lockie | Business Insider
The two US Navy SEALs who authorities suspect killed US Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar in a diplomatic compound in Bamako, Mali, may face the death penalty if convicted, a legal expert told Business Insider.
Investigators have ruled Melgar's death a homicide by strangulation, and a recent report in The Daily Beast cited five sources in the special-operations community as saying the SEALs, who have not been publicly identified, killed Melgar after he discovered they had illegally pocketed money used to pay informants.
Lawrence Brennan, a former US Navy captain who's an expert on naval law, told Business Insider that although the Navy had not executed a sailor in more than 150 years, this case was extraordinary.
"If the reported facts were established, the murder of Staff Sgt. Melgar would be among the most aggravating factors and could justify referral to courts-martial as capital cases," Brennan told Business Insider.
According to the law, "the death penalty is available in cases of pre-meditated murder, as appears possible in this case," Brennan said.
Brennan said the SEALs could stand before the military equivalent of a grand jury, where capital punishment would be on the table.
Melgar, a 34-year-old Texan, deployed to Afghanistan twice. He was assigned to Mali with the 3rd Special Forces Group to help train locals and support counterterrorism operations.
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