Awaiting Trial, Maj. Nidal Hasan Paid
$278,000
By SCOTT
FRIEDMAN
NBCDFW.com
updated 5/20/2013 11:16:42 PM
ET
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/51947575
The Department of Defense confirms to NBC 5
Investigates that accused Fort Hood shooter Major Nidal Hasan has now
been paid more than $278,000 since the Nov. 5, 2009 shooting that left 13 dead
32 injured. The Army said under the Military Code of Justice, Hasan’s salary
cannot be suspended unless he is proven guilty.
If Hasan had been a
civilian defense department employee, NBC 5 Investigates has
learned, the Army could have suspended his pay after just seven
days.
Personnel rules for most civilian government workers allow for
"indefinite suspensions" in cases "when the agency has reasonable cause to
believe that the employee has committed a crime for which a sentence of
imprisonment may be imposed."
Meanwhile,
more than three years later soldiers wounded in the mass shooting are fighting
to receive the same pay and medical benefits given to those wounded in
combat.
Retired Army Spc. Logan Burnett, a reservist who, in 2009,
was soon to be deployed to Iraq, was shot three times when a gunman opened fire
inside the Army Deployment Center.
“I honestly thought I was going to die
in that building,” said Burnett. “Just blood everywhere and then the thought of
-- that's my blood everywhere.”
Burnett nearly died. He's had more than a
dozen surgeries since the shooting, and says post-traumatic stress still keeps
him up at night.
Burnett is now fighting a new battle; only this one is
against the U.S. Army.
The Army has not
classified the wounds of the Ft. Hood victims as “combat related” and declines
to label the shooting a “terrorist attack”,
The “combat related”
designation is an important one, for without it Burnett and other shooting
victims are not given combat-related pay, they are not eligible for Purple Heart
retirement or medical benefits given to other soldiers wounded either at war or
during the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on the Pentagon.
As a result,
Burnett, his wife Torey, and the families of other Fort Hood victims miss out on
thousands of dollars of potential benefits and pay every year.
To Burnett
the shooting felt like combat.
“You take three rounds and lose five good
friends and watch seven other people get killed in front of you. Do you have
another term that we can classify that as?” asked Burnett.
The Army has categorized the shooting as a case of
“workplace violence.”
“Sickens me. Absolutely sickens me.
Workplace violence? I don't even know if I have the words to say,” said
Burnett.
"They don't need to be treated like this. They don't need to sit
and fight every day for this benefit or that,” said Torey Burnett.
As
that fight continues, Burnett was stunned to see a letter detailing the more
$278,000 Hasan has been paid since his arrest. NBC 5 Investigates
received the letter from the Department of Defense in response to a request
under the Freedom of Information Act.
"There have been times when my wife
and I cannot afford groceries. We cannot afford gas in our car,” Burnett said.
“Literally, times where we ate Ramen noodles for weeks on end. This [that Hasan
is still earning a paycheck] makes me sick to my stomach,” said
Burnett.
Burnett isn’t alone in his outrage.
“We're giving the
defendant in this case every benefit of the doubt. But yet we're not giving the
benefits to the victims,” said Rep. Thomas Rooney (R) Florida Rooney, a former
prosecutor at Fort Hood, recently signed a bi-partisan letter urging defense
secretary Chuck Hagel to "...reclassify the victims' deaths and injuries as
'combat related'..."
The letter said the current situation has
"...resulted in an embarrassing lack of care and treatment for the victims and
their families."
“What happened here is
not a case of workplace violence. What happened here was an attack on our
military by a terrorist element specifically targeting our military, which just
so happened to be in the United States of America,” said
Rooney.
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