• Please REGISTER at Anabolic Steroid Forums, and become a member of our NEW community!

US Army Sergeant's Afghan Massacre Defense: "The steroids made me do it"

Arnold

Numero Uno
Staff member
Administrator
Joined
Nov 29, 2000
Messages
82,992
Reaction score
3,072
Points
113
Location
Las Vegas
US Army Sergeant's Afghan Massacre Defense: "The steroids made me do it"
Bales Charged With Steroid Use Before Afghan Killings
by David Lerman

The U.S. Army charged Staff Sergeant Robert Bales with steroid and alcohol abuse as the service filed additional charges against the alleged killer of Afghan civilians.
The new charges include two counts of ???wrongfully possessing and using??? steroids and one of ???wrongfully consuming alcohol while deployed,??? according to a statement yesterday by the Army. The amended charges also reduced the number of alleged murder victims to 16 from 17.

Bales is being held in the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, awaiting trial for the March shootings that roiled U.S.-Afghan relations. An attorney for the solider indicated his defense may turn in part on whether he used steroids, and who may have supplied them.

???We are interested to learn about the alleged steroid use-- in particular the dosage and alleged frequency of use,??? Emma Scanlan, a Seattle-based attorney, said in an e-mail after the Army???s announcement. ???Witnesses have indicated that my client got steroids from the special forces team he was stationed with.???
???It will be interesting to see what kind of pressure was placed on conventional forces placed with elite special forces teams,??? she said.
???Sanity Board???

Bales, a married father of two based at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state, served three tours in Iraq before his Dec. 3 deployment to Afghanistan.
He has been accused of gunning down Afghan civilians in two villages in southern Afghanistan before turning himself in.

If Bales??? mental condition is in question, the military will form a ???sanity board??? to conduct a mental evaluation and determine whether he???s fit to stand trial.
Bales suffered a head injury in Iraq from a vehicle rollover accident, though he was later deemed fit for deployment.

The charges against him now include 16 counts of premeditated murder, six counts of attempted premeditated murder, seven counts of assault, two counts of wrongfully possessing and using steroids, and one count of wrongfully consuming alcohol while deployed, according to the Army statement.
 
Bullshit. As someone with multiple tours in both area's and obvious gear use I call BS!!!!! He's trying to get a mental disorder and get out of the charges.
 
Bullshit. As someone with multiple tours in both area's and obvious gear use I call BS!!!!! He's trying to get a mental disorder and get out of the charges.

Something doesn't add up in this story from the get go. Something is being covered up.
 
when someone says "the devil made me do it" we don't bat an eye they crazy even with all the fucking phaggot god sucking offers....

but god forbid someone says "steroids made me do it" and people believe it.... WTF?!?!?!
 
I agree i also did mutiple tours to both shit countries hes just trying to cover his screw up.



Bullshit. As someone with multiple tours in both area's and obvious gear use I call BS!!!!! He's trying to get a mental disorder and get out of the charges.
 
when someone says "the devil made me do it" we don't bat an eye they crazy even with all the fucking phaggot god sucking offers....

but god forbid someone says "steroids made me do it" and people believe it.... WTF?!?!?!

the devil made him do steroids :gay:
 
Gear is dirt cheap and HG in Afghanistan and Iraq... Everyone was using or trying. Nothing new
 
Did it make him do it? Fuck no he just doing whatever he can do to get off

Well, if it works... We all know people that are alive just because someone didn't want to go to prison.
 
Okay, stop everyone. The headline to this thread could not be much less accurate.

Nobody on the Robert Bales defense team, including the defendant himself, has asserted that the "steroids made [him] do it," nor are there even any indications thus far that steroid use will become part of the defense. On the contrary, it's actually the US Army (the prosecution, essentially) suggesting steroids and alcohol were precursors to the killings, because that would nullify any insanity defense, making Robert Bales 100% culpable for his actions. I'm only talking in terms of the current state of affairs - anything could happen from now until the trial, and the defense could transform in any number of ways as new information comes forth.

But to reiterate: The situation as it stands is the exact opposite of what the headline of this thread is claiming. It is the US Army that has brought forth these new allegations of steroids, not Robert Bales or anyone else representing him. It is therefore more likely to be the prosecution that will claim steroids/alcohol made Robert Bales kill those civilians, meanwhile Robert Bales' attorneys will likely work to minimize/dismiss altogether the steroids/alcohol, insisting their client is crazy and therefore not legally culpable for the killings. That last piece is purely speculation on my part, preceded by the facts we know at this point.
 
Last edited:
If he did claim steroids made him do it, I hope he gets the fucking firing squad. Just sayin'
 
If he did claim steroids made him do it, I hope he gets the fucking firing squad. Just sayin'

As of now, he hasn't. To be clear, you can't claim insanity and blame a drug (which Robert Bales has not done, at this point). If someone is under the influence of a substance in the commission of a crime, they're still legally culpable for their actions. Just ask the thousands of men and women in prison right now for killing or assaulting someone while intoxicated out of their minds on god knows what.

I can't emphasize enough that it's the US Army invoking steroids here, not Robert Bales. So far his defense has been built around claims related to insanity, not drug use.
 
As of now, he hasn't. To be clear, you can't claim insanity and blame a drug (which Robert Bales has not done, at this point). If someone is under the influence of a substance in the commission of a crime, they're still legally culpable for their actions. Just ask the thousands of men and women in prison right now for killing or assaulting someone while intoxicated out of their minds on god knows what.

I can't emphasize enough that it's the US Army invoking steroids here, not Robert Bales. So far his defense has been built around claims related to insanity, not drug use.

I can def believe
 
Back
Top