FAMILY DEMANDS THE TRUTH
New inquiry may expose events that led to Pat Tillman's death
- Robert Collier, SF Chronicle Staff Writer
Sunday, September 25, 2005


The battle between a grieving family and the U.S. military justice system is
on display in thousands of pages of documents strewn across Mary Tillman's
dining room table in suburban San Jose.

As she pores through testimony from three previous Army investigations into
the killing of her son, former football star Pat Tillman, by his fellow Army
Rangers last year in Afghanistan, she hopes that a new inquiry launched in
August by the Pentagon's inspector general finally will answer the family's
questions:

Were witnesses allowed to change their testimony on key details, as alleged
by one investigator? Why did internal documents on the case, such as the
initial casualty report, include false information? When did top Pentagon
officials know that Tillman's death was caused by friendly fire, and why did
they delay for five weeks before informing his family?

"There have been so many discrepancies so far that it's hard to know what to
believe," Mary Tillman said. "There are too many murky details." The files
the family received from the Army in March are heavily censored, with nearly
every page containing blacked-out sections; most names have been deleted.
(Names for this story were provided by sources close to the investigation.)
At least one volume was withheld altogether from the family, and even an
Army press release given to the media has deletions. On her copies, Mary
Tillman has added competing marks and scrawls - countless color-coded tabs
and angry notes such as "Contradiction!" "Wrong!" and "????"

A Chronicle review of more than 2,000 pages of testimony, as well as
interviews with Pat Tillman's family members and soldiers who served with
him, found contradictions, inaccuracies and what appears to be the
military's
attempt at self-protection.

For example, the documents contain testimony of the first investigating
officer alleging that Army officials allowed witnesses to change key details
in their sworn statements so his finding that certain soldiers committed
"gross negligence" could be softened.

Interviews also show a side of Pat Tillman not widely known - a fiercely
independent thinker who enlisted, fought and died in service to his country
yet was critical of President Bush and opposed the war in Iraq, where he
served a tour of duty. He was an avid reader whose interests ranged from
history books on World War II and Winston Churchill to works of leftist Noam
Chomsky, a favorite author.

Unlike Cindy Sheehan - who has protested against President Bush because of
the death of her son Casey in combat in Baghdad - Mary Tillman, 49, who
teaches in a San Jose public junior high school, and her ex-husband, Patrick
Tillman, 50, a San Jose lawyer, have avoided association with the anti-war
movement. Their main public allies are Sen. John McCain, RAriz., and Rep.
Mike Honda, D-San Jose, who have lobbied on their behalf. Yet the case has
high stakes because of Pat Tillman's status as an all-American hero.

A football star at Leland High School in San Jose and at Arizona State
University, Tillman was chosen Pac-10 defensive player of the year in 1997
and selected by the Arizona Cardinals in the NFL draft the following spring.

He earned a bachelor's degree in marketing from Arizona State and graduated
summa cum laude in 3 1/2 years with a 3.84 grade point average. Ever the
student, Tillman not only memorized the playbook by the time he reported for
the Cardinals' rookie camp but pointed out errors in it. He then worked on a
master's degree in history while playing professional football.

His 224 tackles in a single season (2000) are a team record, and because of
team loyalty he rejected a five year, $9 million offer from the St. Louis
Rams for a one-year, $512,000 contract to stay with Arizona the next year.

Moved in part by the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Tillman decided to
give up his career, saying he wanted to fight al Qaeda and help find Osama
bin Laden. He spurned the Cardinals' offer of a three year, $3.6 million
contract extension and joined the Army in June 2002 along with his brother
Kevin, who was playing minor-league baseball for the Cleveland Indians
organization.

Pat Tillman's enlistment grabbed the attention of the nation - and the
highest levels of the Bush administration. A personal letter from Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, thanking him for serving his country, now
resides in a storage box, put away by Pat's widow, Marie.

Instead of going to Afghanistan, as the brothers expected, their Ranger
battalion was sent to participate in the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March
2003. The Tillmans saw combat several times on their way to Baghdad. In
early 2004, they finally were assigned to Afghanistan.

Although the Rangers are an elite combat group, the investigative documents
reveal that the conduct of the Tillmans' detachment - A Company, 2nd
Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment - appeared to be anything but expert as it
advanced through a remote canyon in eastern Afghanistan on April 22, 2004,
on a mission to search for Taliban and al Qaeda fighters in a village called
Manah.

According to the files, when one of the humvees became disabled, thus
stalling the mission, commanding officers split Tillman's platoon in two so
one half could move on and the other could arrange transport for the
disabled vehicle. Platoon leader Lt. David Uthlaut protested the move as
dangerous, but he was overruled. The first group was ordered out in the late
afternoon, with Pat Tillman in the forward unit. Kevin's unit followed 15 to
20 minutes later, hauling the humvee on an Afghan-owned flatbed truck. Both
groups temporarily lost radio and visual contact with each other in the deep
canyon, and the second group came under attack from suspected Taliban
fighters on the surrounding ridges.

Pat Tillman, according to testimony, climbed a hill with another soldier and
an Afghan militiaman, intending to attack the enemy. He offered to remove
his 28-pound body armor so he could move more quickly, but was ordered not
to. Meanwhile, the lead vehicle in the platoon's second group arrived near
Tillman's position about 65 meters away and mistook the group as enemy. The
Afghan stood and fired above the second group at the suspected enemy on the
opposite ridge. Although the driver of the second group's lead vehicle,
according to his testimony, recognized Tillman's group as "friendlies" and
tried to signal others in his vehicle not to shoot, they directed fire
toward the Afghan and began shooting wildly, without first identifying their
target, and also shot at a village on the ridgeline.

The Afghan was killed. According to testimony, Tillman, who along with
others on the hill waved his arms and yelled "cease fire," set off a smoke
grenade to identify his group as fellow soldiers. There was a momentary lull
in the firing, and he and the soldier next to him, thinking themselves safe,
relaxed, stood up and started talking. But the shooting resumed. Tillman was
hit in the wrist with shrapnel and in his body armor with numerous bullets.

The soldier next to him testified: "I could hear the pain in his voice as he
called out, 'Cease fire, friendlies, I am Pat f-ing Tillman, dammit." He
said this over and over until he stopped," having been hit by three bullets
in the forehead, killing him.

The soldier continued, "I then looked over at my side to see a river of
blood coming down from where he was . I saw his head was gone." Two other
Rangers elsewhere on the mountainside were injured by shrapnel.

Kevin was unaware that his brother had been killed until nearly an hour
later when he asked if anyone had seen Pat and a fellow soldier told him.

Tillman's death came at a sensitive time for the Bush administration - just
a week before the Army's abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib in Iraq became
public and sparked a huge scandal. The Pentagon immediately announced that
Tillman had died heroically in combat with the enemy, and President Bush
hailed him as "an inspiration on and off the football field, as with all who
made the ultimate sacrifice in the war on terror."

His killing was widely reported by the media, including conservative
commentators such as Ann Coulter, who called him "an American original -
virtuous, pure and masculine like only an American male can be." His May 3,
2004, memorial in San Jose drew 3,500 people and was nationally televised.

Not until five weeks later, as Tillman's battalion was returning home, did
officials inform the public and the Tillman family that he had been killed
by his fellow soldiers.

According to testimony, the first investigation was initiated less than 24
hours after Tillman's death by an officer in the same Ranger battalion. His
report, delivered May 4, 2004, determined that soldiers involved in the
incident had committed "gross negligence" and should be appropriately
disciplined. The officer became a key witness in the subsequent
investigation. For reasons that are not clear, the officer's investigation
was taken over by a higher ranking commander. That officer's findings,
delivered the next month, called for less severe discipline.

The parents, protesting that many questions were left unanswered, found a
sympathetic ear in McCain, who Mary Tillman later said was greatly admired
by her son. Tillman was well known in Arizona because of his success there
as a college and pro football player. McCain began to press the Pentagon on
the family's behalf, and a third probe finally was authorized. Its report
was delivered in January.

The military is saying little publicly about the Tillman case. Most Army
personnel who were involved in the Tillman incident or the investigations
declined to comment publicly when contacted by The Chronicle. The inspector
general's press office also declined to comment, saying only that the new
probe is openended.

Over the coming weeks, Pentagon investigators are scheduled to carry out new
interviews with many of the soldiers, officers and others involved in the
incident. As they carry out their reassessment, potentially controversial
points include:

-- Conflicting testimony. In his Nov. 14, 2004, interrogation, the first
investigator expressed frustration with "watching some of these guys getting
off, what I thought . was a lesser of a punishment than what they should've
received. And I will tell you, over a period of time . the stories have
changed. They have changed to, I think, help some individuals."

The investigator testified that after he submitted his report on May 3,
higher-ranking officers permitted soldiers to change key details of their
testimony in order to prevent any individual from being singled out for
punishment.

"They had the entire chain of command (inaudible) that were involved, the
[deleted], all sticking up for [deleted] . And the reason the [deleted]
called me in . because the [deleted] . changed their story in how things
occurred and the timing and the distance in an attempt to stick up for their
counterpart, implied, insinuated that the report wasn't as accurate as I
submitted it ." the first investigator testified.

In another section of his testimony, he said witnesses changed details
regarding "the distance, the time, the location and the positioning" in
Tillman's killing.

Another disputed detail was whether the soldiers were firing while speeding
down the canyon or whether they stopped, got out and continued shooting. In
testimony in the third investigation, the soldiers said they did not stop.
However, the medical examiner's report said Tillman was killed by three
bullets closely spaced in his forehead - a pattern that would have been
unlikely if the shooter were moving fast. Spc. Russell Baer, a soldier
pinned down by gunfire on the hillside near Tillman, said in an interview
with The Chronicle that at least two soldiers had gotten out of the humvee
to fire uphill. One other soldier confirmed this account to a Tillman family
member.

One soldier dismissed by the Rangers for his actions in the incident
submitted a statement in the third investigation that suggests the probe was
incomplete: "The investigation does not truly set to rest the events of the
evening of 22 April 2004. There is critical information not included or
misinterpreted in it that could shed some light on who is really at fault
for this," he wrote.

-- Commanders' accountability. According to the documents and interviews,
Capt. William Saunders, to whom platoon leader Uthlaut had protested
splitting his troops, was allowed to change his testimony over a crucial
detail - whether he had reported Uthlaut's dissent to a higher ranking
commander. In initial questioning, Saunders said he had done so, but when
that apparently was contradicted by that commander's testimony, Saunders was
threatened with perjury charges. He was given immunity and allowed to change
his prior testimony.

The regiment's commander, Lt. Col. Jeffrey Bailey, was promoted to colonel
two months after the incident, and Saunders, who a source said received a
reprimand, later was given authority to determine the punishment of those
below him. He gave administrative reprimands to six soldiers, including
Uthlaut, who had been seriously wounded in the face by shrapnel in the
incident. Uthlaut - who was first captain of his senior class at West Point,
the academy's highest honor - was dismissed from the Rangers and re-entered
the regular Army.

"It seems grossly inappropriate that Saunders would determine punishment for
the others when he shares responsibility for the debacle," Mary Tillman
said.

Baer told The Chronicle that commanding officers were to blame for the
friendly fire because they split the platoon and ordered it to leave a
secure location in favor of a region known as a Taliban stronghold.

"It was dumb to send us out during daylight," said Baer, who was honorably
discharged from the Rangers earlier this year and lives in the East Bay.

"It's a well-known military doctrine that privates first learn going through
basic training - if you are in enemy territory and you are stopped for a
prolonged period of time, the best thing to do is to wait until nightfall.
Why they thought that moving us out in broad daylight from our position,
dragging a busted humvee slowly through a known hotspot after we had been
stranded there all day was a good idea will forever elude me. Who made that
decision? Bailey? Saunders? That's what I want to know."

-- Inaccurate information. While the military code gives clear guidance for
informing family members upon a soldier's death when cases are suspected of
being a result of friendly fire, that procedure was not followed in the
Tillman case. After Tillman's death, the Army gave conflicting and incorrect
descriptions of the events.

On April 22, the family was told that Tillman was hit with enemy fire
getting out of a vehicle and died an hour later at a field hospital.

Although there was ample testimony that Tillman died immediately, an Army
report - dated April 22, 2004, from the field hospital in Salerno,
Afghanistan, where his body was taken - suggested otherwise. While it stated
that he had no blood pressure or pulse "on arrival," it stated that cardio
pulmonary resuscitation had been conducted and that he was transferred to
the intensive care unit for further CPR.

On April 23, all top Ranger commanders were told of the suspected
fratricide. That same day, an Army press release said he was killed "when
his patrol vehicle came under attack."

On April 29, four days before Tillman's memorial, Gen. John Abizaid, chief
of U.S. Central Command, and other top commanders were told of the
fratricide. It is not known if Abizaid reported the news to Washington. Mary
Tillman believes that with her son's high profile, and the fact that
Rumsfeld sent him a personal letter, the word quickly reached the defense
secretary. "If Pat was on Rumsfeld's radar, it's pretty likely that he would
have been informed right away after he was killed," she said. White House,
Pentagon and Army spokesmen all said they had no information on when Bush or
Rumsfeld were informed.

On April 30, the Army awarded Tillman a Silver Star medal for bravery,
saying that "through the firing Tillman's voice was heard issuing fire
commands to take the fight to the enemy on the dominating high ground."

On May 2, the acting Army Secretary Les Brownlee was told of the fratricide.

On May 7, the Army's official casualty report stated incorrectly that
Tillman was killed by "enemy forces" and "died in a medical treatment
facility."

On May 28, the Army finally admitted to Tillman's family that he had been
killed by friendly fire.

"The administration clearly was using this case for its own political
reasons," said the father, Patrick Tillman. "This cover-up started within
minutes of Pat's death, and it started at high levels. This is not something
that (lower-ranking) people in the field do," he said.

The files show that many of the soldiers questioned in the inquiry said it
was common knowledge that the incident involved friendly fire.

A soldier who on April 23 burned Tillman's bullet riddled body armor - which
would have been evidence in a friendly-fire investigation - testified that
he did so because there was no doubt it was friendly fire that killed
Tillman. Two days later, Tillman's uniform and vest also were burned because
they were soaked in blood and considered a biohazard. Tillman's uniform also
was burned.

The officer who led the first investigation testified that when he was given
responsibility for the probe the morning after Tillman's death, he was
informed that the cause was "potential fratricide.''

After they received the friendly-fire notification May 28, the Tillmans
began a public campaign seeking more information. But it was only when the
Tillmans began angrily accusing the Pentagon of a coverup, in June 2005,
that the Army apologized for the delay, issuing a statement blaming
"procedural misjudgments and mistakes."

-- Legal liability. In testimony on Nov. 14, the officer who conducted the
first investigation said that he thought some Rangers could have been
charged with "criminal intent," and that some Rangers committed "gross
negligence." The legal difference between the two terms is roughly similar
to the distinction between murder and involuntary manslaughter.

The Tillmans demand that all avenues of inquiry remain open.

"I want to know what kind of criminal intent there was," Mary Tillman said.
"There's so much in the reports that is (deleted) that it's hard to tell
what we're not seeing."

In Congress, pressure is building for a full public disclosure of what
happened. "I am committed to continuing my work with the Tillman family to
ensure that their concerns are being addressed," said Rep. Honda. He added
that he expects the investigation to do the following: "1) provide all
factual evidence about the events of April 22, 2004; 2) identify the command
decisions that contributed to Pat Tillman's death; 3) explain why the Army
took so long to reveal fratricide as the cause of Pat Tillman's death; and
4) offer all necessary recommendations for improved procedures relating to
such incidents."

Patrick Tillman drily called the new Army probe "the latest, greatest
investigation." He added, "In Washington, I don't think any of them want it
investigated. They (politicians and Army officials) just don't want to see
it ended with them, landing on their desk so they get blamed for the
cover-up." The January 2005 investigation concluded that there was no
coverup.

Throughout the controversy, the Tillman family has been reluctant to cause a
media stir. Mary noted that Pat shunned publicity, refusing all public
comment when he enlisted and asking the Army to reject all media requests
for interviews while he was in service. Pat's widow, Marie, and his brother
Kevin have not become publicly involved in the case, and they declined to
comment for this article.

Yet other Tillman family members are less reluctant to show Tillman's unique
character, which was more complex than the public image of a gung-ho
patriotic warrior. He started keeping a journal at 16 and continued the
practice on the battlefield, writing in it regularly. (His journal was lost
immediately after his death.) Mary Tillman said a friend of Pat's even
arranged a private meeting with Chomsky, the antiwar author, to take place
after his return from Afghanistan - a meeting prevented by his death. She
said that although he supported the Afghan war, believing it justified by
the Sept. 11 attacks, "Pat was very critical of the whole Iraq war."

Baer, who served with Tillman for more than a year in Iraq and Afghanistan,
told one anecdote that took place during the March 2003 invasion as the
Rangers moved up through southern Iraq.

"I can see it like a movie screen," Baer said. "We were outside of (a city
in southern Iraq) watching as bombs were dropping on the town. We were at an
old air base, me, Kevin and Pat, we weren't in the fight right then. We were
talking. And Pat said, 'You know, this war is so f- illegal.' And we all
said, 'Yeah.' That's who he was. He totally was against Bush."

Another soldier in the platoon, who asked not to be identified, said Pat
urged him to vote for Bush's Democratic opponent in the 2004 election, Sen.
John Kerry.

Senior Chief Petty Officer Stephen White - a Navy SEAL who served with Pat
and Kevin for four months in Iraq and was the only military member to speak
at Tillman's memorial - said Pat "wasn't very fired up about being in Iraq"
and instead wanted to go fight al Qaeda in Afghanistan. He said both Pat and
Kevin (who has a degree in philosophy) "were amazingly well-read
individuals . very firm in some of their beliefs, their political and
religious or not so religious beliefs."

Baer recalled that Tillman encouraged him in his ambitions as an amateur
poet. "I would read him my poems, and we would talk about them," Baer said.
"He helped me grow as an individual."

Tillman subscribed to the Economist magazine, and a fellow soldier said
Tillman created a makeshift base library of classic novels so his platoon
mates would have literature to read in their down time. He even brought
gourmet coffee to brew for his platoon in the field in Afghanistan.

Baer said Tillman was popular among his fellow soldiers and had no enemies.
"The guys who killed Pat were his biggest fans," he said. "They were really
wrecked afterward." He called Tillman "this amazing positive force who
really brought our whole platoon together.

He had this great energy. Everybody loved him." His former comrades and
family recall Tillman as a born leader yet remarkably humble. White, the
Navy SEAL, recalls one day when "some 19-year-old Ranger came and ordered
him to cut an acre of grass.

And Pat just did it, he cut that grass, he didn't complain. He could have
taken millions of dollars playing football, but instead he was just taking
orders like that."

Mary Tillman says that's how Pat would have wanted to be remembered, as an
individual, not as a stock figure or political prop. But she also believes
"Pat was a real hero, not what they used him as."

For the moment, all that is left are the memories and the thick binders
spread across Mary Tillman's dining room table in San Jose. As she waits for
the Pentagon investigators to finish their new probe, she wonders whether
they will ask the hard questions. Like other family members, "I just want
accountability," she said. "I want answers."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

'IT'S HARD TO KNOW WHAT TO BELIEVE'

That's the lament of Mary Tillman, above, a teacher of special education in
a San Jose public school. She has long pressed the Army to reopen its
investigation into the friendly-fire killing of her son, Pat Tillman, in a
canyon in Afghanistan on April 22, . The persistence of Mary Tillman and her
former husband, Patrick Tillman, was rewarded when the Pentagon's inspector
general opened a new inquiry in August, the fourth such probe. Mary Tillman
says she hopes questions created by discrepancies in past testimony will
finally be answered.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STORY CHANGES OVER TIME
An officer in Pat Tillman's Ranger battalion who directed the first
investigation into the soldier's death served as a witness on Nov. 14, 2004,
in the third investigation, which was led by Brig. Gen. Gary Jones. The
first investigator complained that the officers in charge of the second
invest-

igation had allowed Rangers involved in the shooting to change their
testimony.

THREAT OF PERJURY CHARGES
An excerpt from a March 3, 2005, memorandum by

Brig. Gen. Gary Jones describes how Capt. William Saunders, the commander of
Pat Tillman's Ranger company, was threatened with perjury charges. Jones'
memo said Saunders made false claims that he had informed his superiors that
platoon commander Lt. David Uthlaut had protested orders given to him
leading up to the incident. Despite this threat, Saunders was allowed to
change his testimony and was granted immunity.

E-mail Robert Collier at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

©2005 San Francisco Chronicle







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