Soldier who shot bunkmate admits he had other options
Chris Shannon, Cape Breton Post
SYDNEY, N.S. - A Canadian reservist admitted on Monday that he had other options than shooting a fellow Canadian soldier and bunkmate in a tent at Kandahar Airfield in Afghanistan.
At his court martial on Monday, Cpl. Matthew Wilcox, 24, said he felt threatened when he heard a cocked pistol and glanced at the barrel of a gun pointed in his direction.
Cpl. Wilcox, from Glace Bay, N.S., has pleaded not guilty to charges of manslaughter, criminal negligence causing death and negligent performance of duty in the March 6, 2007, death of Cpl. Kevin Megeney of Stellarton, N.S.
During his second day of testimony, Cpl. Wilcox said he fell back from a crouched position, pulled his 9-mm pistol from his right leg holster and readied it before pivoting and shooting the person holding the other gun.
"I could see the front of the barrel as the slide moved forward," Cpl. Wilcox said during cross-examination.
Prosecutor Maj. Jason Samson suggested to Cpl. Wilcox that he had other choices, including running out of the tent or darting behind the bunk space of another soldier.
"I suppose I could've, or moved out of his line of view by running to Master Cpl. [Nathan] Crosby's bunk," Cpl. Wilcox said. "I suppose I could have turned around and did nothing, too."
The defence has put forward the theory Cpl. Wilcox acted in self-defence to an unknown threat. Cpl. Wilcox agreed during cross-examination on Friday that he reacted without first assessing the threat.
"At the time I just reacted to a pistol pointed at me. I did not have the time to think through all of the possibilities," he said Monday.
Maj. Samson said the sound of the 9-mm pistol could have been as simple as Cpl. Megeney checking his gun to ensure there were no rounds in the chamber. The prosecutor also suggested Cpl. Megeney could have been cleaning his gun at the time.
"If Kevin didn't see you, maybe he thought he was pointing in a safe direction?" Maj. Samson asked.
"It's possible, sir, but he would normally point a gun toward the ground," Cpl. Wilcox replied.
He said "in retrospect" there were other ways to handle the situation rather than using deadly force. "Sitting here today sir, with the evidence, I don't think there was a threat."
Coming off a 12-hour shift as a member of force protection company, which is in charge of protecting one of the main gates of Kandahar Airfield, Cpl. Wilcox said he wasn't in a fully relaxed state at the tent but he wasn't "at a heightened state of awareness either."
Cpl. Wilcox refused to buy into the prosecution's theory that he had been playing a game of "quick draw" with Cpl. Megeney at the time of the shooting.
That claim made by one of his friends, Master Cpl. Kyle Keigan, during earlier testimony was backed up by a couple other witnesses who believed through rumour and innuendo that to be the case.
There were 35 people watching the court martial from the gallery Monday, by far the largest crowd on hand to view the proceedings to date. Cpl. Megeney's parents, Dexter and Karen, had the support of 11 friends and relatives who sat with them behind the prosecutors' table.
Wilcox had about 10 supporters in court, most of them family members.
The defence closed its case at the close of Cpl. Wilcox's testimony. The trial now proceeds Tuesday with closing arguments.
cshannon@cbpost.com
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