Monday, 6 January 2014

How The U.S. Army's Still Trying To Cover-Up The Rape, Murder of a Female U.S. Soldier By Fellow U.S. Soldiers in IRAQ!

LaVena Johnson was a female soldier who enlisted in the U.S. Army in 2003. She was the first woman from Missouri to die in Iraq. She was found in her tent with a gunshot wound to the head, a broken nose, black eye, loose teeth, acid burns on her genitals, and a trail of blood leading away from her tent. Yet the U.S. Department of Defense has officially ruled her death a suicide.

The autopsy report and photographs revealed that her death was inconsistent with a suicide, and looked consistent with a rape-murder, but as far as the U.S. Criminal Investigative Command for the Army is concerned the case remains closed.  Her father became suspicious when he saw her body in the funeral home and decided to investigate.  At first the Department of the Army refused to release information, but eventually it did under the Freedom of Information Act after Pat Tillman’s death.

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