United States v. SGT D. - Fort Irwin, CA
Mar 15, 2011OUTCOME: Not Guilty Of All Charges
Aggravated sexual assault
Weston, FL
Military law Lawyer at Weston, FL
Practice Areas: Military Law, Criminal Defense
OUTCOME: Not Guilty Of All Charges
Aggravated sexual assault
OUTCOME: Not Guilty Of All Charges
Bribery, graft, larceny, contractor fraud, embezzlement
OUTCOME: Not guilty of rape, Not guilty of burglary, guilty of false official statement. No jail time.
Rape, burglary, false official statement
OUTCOME: Not Guilty Of All Charges
Aggravated sexual assault
OUTCOME: All charges dropped at preliminary hearing
Aggravated sexual assault
OUTCOME: Not Guilty Of All Charges
Client charged with 16 charges including rape, aggravated assault and others.
OUTCOME: Partial acquittal, no jail time, no discharge
In February 2007, Waddington was called to defend an Army Sergeant, SFC Timothy Drake, of allegations of using a baseball bat to beat enemy insurgents captured at the 2003 Battle of Fallajah, Iraq. SFC ... Drake was a member of the U.S. Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, stationed at Forward Operating Base Mercury (FOB Mercury) in Iraq. The media and Human Rights Watch dubbed Drake the leader of the "The Murderous Maniacs" and "Skull Crusher." Drake made 3 alleged "confessions" to CID. Drake fought charges at jury trial. The skull fracture charge was dismissed. Jury acquitted Drake of cover up, encouraging assault, assault by kicking, and aggravated assault with bat. He was convicted of misdemeanor battery and lying to CID. He was sentenced to a the lowest possible sentence in military law, a Reprimand. He received no jail time, no fine, no reduction, and was retained on active duty.
OUTCOME: Charges dismissed
In March 2008, Waddington was called to defend a third year Naval Academy Midshipman accused of breaking into the room of a fellow midshipman and raping her. The accused contested the charges at an Art ... icle 32 preliminary hearing at the Washington Naval Yard in April 2008. Waddington and his team of Navy defense lawyers, LT Paul Jenkins and LT Maryann Bridges, attacked the NCIS investigation as sloppy and pointed to a lack of physical, forensic, and scientific evidence and contradicting witness testimony in an attempt to disprove the allegations. The Investigating Officer wrote a 20 page opinion recommending that the court martial charges be dismissed. On June 3, 2008, Naval Academy Superintendent Vice Adm. Jeffrey Fowler dismissed all court martial charges against the midshipman.
OUTCOME: Acquitted of murder
In July 2007, Waddington was called to defend an Army Specialist Christopher P. Shore of a premeditated murder allegation. He faced life in prison. On June 23, 2007, near Kirkuk, Iraq, a platoon of eli ... te Army Scouts conducted a night time raid into enemy territory. Their mission was to take down a confirmed cell of Iraqi insurgents responsible for the roadside bombings of U.S. troop convoys. SPC Shore, a GA native, led the assault team into the building. By the end of the raid, one insurgent was mortally wounded and several others were captured. SPC Shore is charged with shooting the detainee after his platoon leader, SFC Trey A. Corrales, shot him with an M-4 rifle. Waddington and Army defense lawyer Major Javier Rivera fought the murder charge in front of an Army jury of officers and enlisted soldiers. SPC Shore was acquitted of murder and convicted of discharging his weapon near the detainee (assault). He was sentenced to 120 days in jail, a reprimand, a 2 rank reduction, and no discharge. Shore will continue to serve in the U.S. Army. After 60 days of confinement, the commander of the 25th Infantry Division, Brig. General Michael Bednarek, released SPC Shore from prison and returned him to duty. The General deferred the sentence and let Shore out of prison after serving 72 days. On May 21, 2008, Brig. General Bednarek reduced Shore's conviction to simple assault, a misdemeanor that carries a maximum of 90 jails in jail. The change erased the soldier’s felony record. The general also reduced Shore's jail time to "time-served" and restored Shore to his former rank of Specialist. At the end of May 2008, Shore was promoted to the rank of Sergeant and continues to serve as a Army Scout.
OUTCOME: Negotiated plea that saved life.
In June 2006, Waddington was in private legal practice when he was called on to defend SPC William B. Hunsaker in a triple murder case. Four soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division were accused of exec ... uting suspected al-Qaida insurgents that were captured during a raid near Samarra, Iraq on 9 May 2006. The case made international headlines when evidence revealed that SPC Hunsaker's commander, COL Michael D. Steele, gave orders to "kill all military age males" on the objective. The objective was a confirmed al-Qaida training compound, visited by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. COL Steele is an officer who once commanded a Ranger company sent into Mogadishu, Somalia, on a rescue mission that was recounted in the book and movie "Black Hawk Down." Waddington and other defense lawyers, including Paul Bergrin, defended the four soldiers in court proceedings in Tikrit, Iraq and Fort Campbell, KY. After 8 months of legal battles, SPC Juston Graber, one of the accused, entered into an agreement with the prosecution to testify against SPC Hunsaker and the other defendants. Facing a mandatory life sentence, SPC Hunsaker and PFC Corey Clagett, another defendant, entered plea deals that reduced their maximum sentence to 18 years, making them eligible for parole after 5 1/2 years. At SPC Hunsaker's guilty plea, he told the military judge that by killing three al-Qaida operatives, he believes that he was saving American lives and his actions were a "lesser evil for the greater good." Meanwhile, COL Steele received a letter of reprimand for his actions and was granted immunity from the 101st Airborne Division Commander. The Iron Triangle cases were the subject of the 2008 book, "Rules of Engagement? Operation Iron Triangle," by Stjepan Meštrović.