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Incident on Hill 192 and the real names of the POS that did this


Incident on Hill 192


The incident on Hill 192 is the name the United States Army called[1] the kidnapping, gang rape, and murder of Phan Thi Mao, a twenty-year-old Vietnamese woman[2] on November 19, 1966[1] by an American squad during the Vietnam War.[2] Though news of the incident reached State-side shortly after the officers' trials,[3] the story gained widespread notoriety through Daniel Lang's 1969 article for The New Yorker and a subsequent book. In 1989 Brian De Palma directed the film, Casualties of War, which was based on Lang's Book.

Incident

On November 17, 1966, Sgt. David E. Gervase (20) and Pfc. Steven Cabbot Thomas (21)—both members of C Company, 2nd Battalion (Airborne), 8th Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division—talked to three other squad members (Pfc’s Robert M. Storeby, 22; Cipriano S. Garcia, 21; and Joseph C. Garcia, 20) about plans to kidnap a “pretty girl” during their reconnaissance mission planned for the next day.[6] When interviewed by Lang in 1968, Pfc Robert M. Storeby (under the alias of Sven Erikson) said “[Gervase] stated that we would get the woman for the purpose of boom-boom, or sexual intercourse, and at the end of five days we would kill her.” Storeby also recalled that Gervase claimed it would be “good for the morale of the squad.”

At approximately 5:00 am on the morning of November 18, the squad entered the tiny village of Cat Tuong, in the Phu My District, looking for a woman. After finding Phan Thi Mao, they bound her wrists with rope, gagged her and took her on the mission. Later, after setting up camp in an abandoned hooch, four of the soldiers (excluding Pfc. Storeby) took turns raping Mao. The following day, in the midst of a firefight with the Viet Cong, Thomas and Gervase became worried that the woman would be seen with the squad. Thomas took Mao into a brushy area and stabbed her three times with a hunting knife, but she did not die. When she tried to flee, three of the soldiers chased after her. Thomas caught her and shot her in the head with his M16 rifle.
Aftermath

Pfc. Storeby initially reported the crime. At first, the chain of command, including the company commander, took no action. Storeby, despite threats against his life by the soldiers who took part in the rape and murder, was determined to see the soldiers punished. His persistence in reporting the crime to higher authorities eventually resulted in general courts-martial against his 4 fellow soldiers. It was during these proceedings that the name of the victim was identified by her sister as Phan Thi Mao.

Pfc. Thomas, Pfc. Cipriano Garcia and Pfc. Joseph Garcia were each convicted of rape and murder in March and April 1967. Sgt. Gervase was found guilty on the count of murder but not of rape. At the trial of Pfc. Thomas, who committed the actual stabbing and shooting, the prosecutor asked the jury to impose a death sentence. The court, however, sentenced Thomas to life imprisonment. This sentence was first commuted to 20 years, then reduced to 8, which made him eligible for parole after half that time. Likewise, Gervase’s initial sentence of 10 years was reduced to 8 and he too was eligible for release within half that time.

In 1968, Joseph Garcia was acquitted on the appeal of his initial 15-year sentence after it was determined that his Fifth Amendment rights were violated, and his confession was ruled as inadmissible. His cousin, Cipriano's, sentence was shortened to 22 months. All soldiers (excluding Pfc. Storeby) were dishonorably discharged from the Army.

In 1992, former Pfc. Steven Cabbot Thomas gained further notoriety when he was charged with being an accessory after the fact in the murder trial of George Loeb, who was charged with the May 17, 1991 shooting death of an African-American USS Saratoga sailor named Harold J. Mansfield. Both Thomas and Loeb were members of the white supremacist Church of the Creator. Thomas remained free on bond, during the trial and court records showed that in exchange for his testimony he would only serve one year's probation.

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In March 1967, the UPI revealed the real names of the members of the squad as Staff Sgt. David E. Gervase, age 20 from Erie NY (Meserve); Pfc. Steven Cabbot Thomas, age 21 from Brooklyn NY (Clark); Pfc. Robert M. Storeby, age 22 from St. Paul Minn. (Eriksson); Pfc. Joseph C. Garcia, age 20 from Albuquerque NM (Hatcher) and his brother Cipriano Schultz Garcia, age 21 from San Antonio, TX (Diaz).[4]

Of the real sentenced soldiers their characters were based on, Joseph Garcia (Private Herbert Hatcher) was acquitted on appeal after it was determined that his Fifth Amendment rights were violated, and his confession was ruled as inadmissible. His brother, Cipriano's sentence (Private Antonio Diaz) was shortened to 22 months. Sergeant Gervase (Meserve) and Pfc. Thomas's (Clark) sentences were reduced to eight years, with the possibility of parole after 4 years.[5][6] In 1992, former Pfc Steven Cabbot Thomas (CPL. Thomas E. Clark) received further notoriety when he was charged with being an accessory after the fact in the murder of Harold Mansfield Jr., an African-American Gulf War veteran.[7] Thomas served the minimum 4 years in prison for the rape and murder of the girl in 1966, and had since become a leader in the white-supremacist Church of the Creator. The identity of the girl was revealed by her sister as Phan Thi Mao during the court-martial. The girl's ordeal began on November 18, 1966 and ended the next day with her death on November 19.

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[deleted]

That goes to show that not everyone should serve in the military. There are some that take it too another level and makes everyone look bad.

Your nobody until somebody kills you.

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[deleted]

I heard reports of people that decided to go to Vietnam because they got into trouble with the law. If that's true, I can see how some people were more crazier then others.

Your nobody until somebody kills you.

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[deleted]


Well I wouldn't be surprised on the Klan part. A lot of southern white boys went there and brought their hate for anything not white with them.
Your nobody until somebody kills you.

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