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(2003) Fort Benning soldiers arrested (3 soldiers arrested for murder of another soldier)
Athens Banner Herald ^ | 11/10/03 | Athens Banner Herald

Posted on 11/10/2003 9:58:04 AM PST by honeygrl

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To: cousinrose
Why do you care so much about what's posted?

This is a political website and a discussion forum, not a bboard. We get a lot of fakes coming to threads to "discuss" their relatives and disrupt the forum. We call them "necro trolls". We have no way of knowing you you and your "friends" are real or trolls.

81 posted on 01/31/2006 10:16:57 AM PST by DJ MacWoW (If you think you know what's coming next....You don't know Jack.)
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Comment #82 Removed by Moderator

To: cousinrose

Btw, we do support and love the military and have some very dedicated Freepers that get care packages to them. They have our love and support. If this young soldier is your loved one, you have our deepest sympathy.


83 posted on 01/31/2006 10:47:31 AM PST by DJ MacWoW (If you think you know what's coming next....You don't know Jack.)
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To: DJ MacWoW

As relatives of the victim, we also want to seek the truth no matter how painful it may be. I sincerely hope our family did not disrupt this open forum. This forum allows for both sides of this issue to be discussed. When this incident first happened, this forum allowed us to get access to different articles that we couldn't find. For that, I am grateful. Please keep the discussion open and do not censor your comments.


84 posted on 01/31/2006 5:57:11 PM PST by nenny2006 (Jen Lapuz--http://memoriesofrichard.tripod.com)
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To: DJ MacWoW

So I'm fake for loving my cousin and being bitter that I will never see him again or hear his war stories. Great. I just want him to be respected for the man he was.


85 posted on 01/31/2006 6:47:25 PM PST by cousinrose ("Proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm free")
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To: nenny2006

It is sometimes difficult to know who is sincere. We have had heartless people come to threads like this one and pretend to be family. They hurt those who truly ARE grieving. It also makes it difficult to know who needs love and comfort. You are welcome on FR to discuss and even ask for prayer. Unfortunately, as I said, there are those on the 'net who feel it's "fun" to troll threads like these. In those situations, everyone loses. Your family is more than welcome to come and share and to find news.


86 posted on 01/31/2006 8:52:56 PM PST by DJ MacWoW (If you think you know what's coming next....You don't know Jack.)
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To: DJ MacWoW

The 48 Hours Story on CBS about my cousin Richard Davis is tentatively scheduled to air on April 29, 2006 at 10pm.


87 posted on 03/01/2006 2:59:20 PM PST by nenny2006 (Jen Lapuz--http://memoriesofrichard.tripod.com)
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To: nenny2006

I STRONGLY BELIVE ALBERTO MARTINEZ DID NOT KILL THAT POOR GUY MAY HE REST IN PEACE!! WHAT A COINSIDENCE JUST FINGERS WERE POINTED AND N0 EVEDINCE OR FINGERPRINTS WERE FOUND FROM ALBERTO IM VERY FURIOUS BECAUSE BORGONIA WAS SO ANGERED IN SAYING ALBERTO DID IT WHEN HE HAS PAST ISSUES OF TEMPER IN THE PAST FROM THE ARMY!!! COME ON NOW I CAN SAY I SAW MY NEIGHBOR KILL SOMEONE WOULD HE BE SENCTENCE TO LIFE WITHOUT EVEDINCE ALSO????? THIS WAS A CROCK OF BULL AND ONLY GOD KNOWS THE TRUE KILLER!!!! IM ALBERTO MARTINEZ AUNT AND I HOPR BORGONIA GETS HIS WITH GOD!!!!!! AN INNOCENT LIFE WAS PUT TO LIFE IN SENTENCE AND ITS NOT FAIR THAT THE TRUE KILLERS ARE PUT OUT IN FREEDOME IN A FEW YRS!!!!


88 posted on 03/07/2007 9:25:31 PM PST by GUERITA75
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To: GUERITA75

Welcome to Free Republic. Don't use all caps.


89 posted on 03/07/2007 10:47:17 PM PST by PLMerite ("Unarmed, one can only flee from Evil. But Evil isn't overcome by fleeing from it." Jeff Cooper)
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To: nenny2006

Lanny and Remy Davis have started a petition to urge the DA of Columbus GA to do the right thing and release their sons remains for a proper burial. Please visit the following link and sign your support. Lanny and Remy Davis made another attempt on March 15, 2007 to have Richards remains returned but after 4 years, District Attorney, Gray Conger of Columbus GA still refuses to release Richard.

http://www.petitiononline.com/Lanrem/petition.html

Also, the Official Website for The Richard T. Davis Foundation For Peace is currently in construction and online for viewing. A wonderful and generous student at Columbus State University named Martha Garcia is donating her time and talent as Webmaster.

www.richarddavisforpeace.com

Tell everyone you know, especially people in the military:
BRING RICHARD DAVIS HOME FROM THE WAR

Thanks for your support!!
Sincerely,
The Richard T. Davis Foundation For Peace


90 posted on 03/28/2007 1:49:18 PM PDT by nenny2006 (Jen Lapuz--http://memoriesofrichard.tripod.com www.richarddavisforpeace.com)
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To: nenny2006

July 26, 2007
While Real Bullets Fly, Movies Bring War Home
By MICHAEL CIEPLY

Correction Appended

LOS ANGELES, July 25 — On a night four years ago, five soldiers back from three months in Iraq went drinking at a Hooters restaurant and a topless bar near Fort Benning, Ga.

Before the night was over, one of them, Specialist Richard R. Davis, was dead of at least 33 stab wounds, his body doused with lighter fluid and burned. Two of the group would eventually be convicted of the murder, another pleaded guilty to manslaughter, and the last confessed to concealing the crime.

Now some in Hollywood want moviegoers to decide if the killing is emblematic of a war gone bad, part of a new and perhaps risky willingness in the entertainment business to push even the touchiest debates about post-9/11 security, Iraq and the troops’ status from the confines of documentaries into the realm of mainstream political drama.

On Sept. 14, Warner Independent Pictures expects to release “In the Valley of Elah,” a drama inspired by the Davis murder, written and directed by Paul Haggis, whose “Crash” won the Academy Award for best picture in 2006. The film stars Tommy Lee Jones as a retired veteran who defies Army bureaucrats and local officials in a search for his son’s killers. In one of the movie’s defining images, the American flag is flown upside down in the heartland, the signal of extreme distress.

Other coming films also use the damaged Iraq veteran to raise questions about a continuing war. In “Grace Is Gone,” directed by James C. Strouse and due in October from the Weinstein Company, John Cusack and two daughters struggle with the loss of a wife and mother who is killed on duty. Kimberly Peirce’s “Stop-Loss,” set for release in March by Paramount, meanwhile, casts Ryan Phillippe as a veteran who defies an order that would send him back to Iraq.

In the past, Hollywood usually gave the veteran more breathing space. William Wyler’s “Best Years of Our Lives,” about the travails of those returning from World War II, was released more than a year after the war’s end. Similarly Hal Ashby’s “Coming Home” and Oliver Stone’s “Born on the Fourth of July,” both stories of Vietnam veterans, came well after the fall of Saigon.

“Media in general responds much more quickly than ever before,” said Scott Rudin, a producer of “Stop-Loss.” “Why shouldn’t movies do the same?” He said his film was deliberately scheduled to be released in the middle of the presidential campaign season.

That impetus for immediacy is driving other filmmakers and studios as well. In October, for example, New Line Cinema will release “Rendition,” in which Reese Witherspoon plays a woman whose Egyptian-born husband is snared by a runaway counterterrorism apparatus. Paul Greengrass, the director of “The Bourne Ultimatum,” in which the bad guys belong to a similar rogue unit, is adapting Rajiv Chandrasekaran’s book about the Green Zone in Baghdad, “Imperial Life in the Emerald City,” for Universal Pictures.

Brian De Palma’s “Redacted,” focusing on an Army squad that persecutes an Iraqi family, is to be released in December by Magnolia Pictures. And Sony Pictures is developing a film based on the story of Richard A. Clarke, the former national security official and Bush administration critic.

Among the new films, “Valley of Elah” is sure to be one of the most closely examined, thanks to Mr. Haggis’s credentials — he was nominated for an Oscar for writing “Million Dollar Baby” and was nominated for another as co-writer of “Letters From Iwo Jima” — and because of his opposition to United States policy in Iraq.

“This is not one of our brighter moments in America,” Mr. Haggis said in a telephone interview from London, where he is still working on the film’s music. “We should not have gotten involved.”

Still, Mr. Haggis insisted that “Valley of Elah” — the title refers to the site where David fought Goliath — was not intended to enforce his point of view. Rather, he said, it is meant to raise questions about “what it does to these kids” to be deployed in a situation where enemies are often indistinguishable from neutral civilians, and the rules of engagement may force decisions that are difficult to live with.

Despite some obvious fictionalization — the Fort Benning case did not involve the authority-challenging local detective and single mother played by Charlize Theron — the film hews closely enough to fact that Mr. Haggis is considering a dedication to Specialist Davis.

But whether the case truly speaks for returning veterans will not be easily settled, even with help from Warner Independent. The studio plans to supplement some of its promotional screenings with panel discussions of post-traumatic stress disorder, a factor raised in the movie.

“The issues are similar to what a lot of us are coping with,” said an approving Garett Reppenhagen, an Iraq veteran who saw “Valley of Elah” last week at one of the first such screenings in Washington. Mr. Reppenhagen, a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, helped recruit viewers for the screening.

By contrast, Dennis Griffee, a wounded veteran who is national commander of the Iraq War Veterans Organization, said he turned down a request to become involved with the film after learning that Susan Sarandon, a vocal opponent of the war, had a prominent role.

“At the very least it is offensive,” Mr. Griffee said of what he sees as a widespread refusal to acknowledge the troops’ pride at achievements in Iraq. He added that virtually every member of his platoon wound up in college, not jail, on return.

Ilona Meagher, who wrote “Moving a Nation to Care: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and America’s Returning Troops” (Ig Publishing) and has joined Warner’s promotional effort, acknowledged that the Davis case was among the most extreme of some 170 stress-related episodes she had documented since 2005. “We all know that human beings respond/are moved by stories that are more extreme in nature,” Ms. Meagher wrote in a follow-up e-mail message.

In listing its Top 10 crime stories of last year, in fact, The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer in Georgia counted only two involving the 25,000 soldiers who are typically stationed at nearby Fort Benning.

Edging his film away from the real case, Mr. Haggis shot mostly in New Mexico and operated without military approvals that would have been required at Fort Benning. He originally wrote the script for Warner Brothers, which eventually agreed that the movie should be financed by Summit Entertainment, NALA Films and Samuels Media Capital on a budget that has been reported at about $23 million. The companies are clearly banking on the considerable appeal of Mr. Jones and the potential for awards to overcome perceived audience resistance to Iraq-theme movies.

MGM took in only about $44,000 in domestic ticket sales with Irwin Winkler’s “Home of the Brave,” another returning-vet picture that was released late last year. “We couldn’t get anybody to go see it” despite positive test screenings, Mr. Winkler said. He speculated that the audience might prefer a longer interval before viewing events as troubling as war.

Polly Cohen, president of Warner Independent, views Mr. Haggis’s film in broader terms. “To me, it’s a father-son story,” she said.

For Mr. Haggis, however, selling that story brings some complications: His movie does not see its son quite the way the real-life father sees his own.

“My son saw some war atrocities over in Iraq, and they had to murder him in order to keep it quiet,” said Lanny Davis, a retired Army staff sergeant whose efforts sparked the investigation at a time when his son was assumed to be absent without leave. The atrocity question did not figure significantly in the real-life trial, but the movie puts a twist of its own on the issue.

On another point, however, Mr. Davis had no quarrel with Mr. Haggis. “I’ve been thinking about flying my own flag upside down,” Mr. Davis said. “This isn’t my America, the one I stood up for.”

Correction: July 27, 2007

A front-page article yesterday about coming films from Hollywood that raise questions about the Iraq war erroneously attributed an award to Paul Haggis, the writer and director of a new Iraq-related film, “In the Valley of Elah.” Although Mr. Haggis, who shared two Oscars for “Crash,” was nominated for an Oscar for the screenplay of “Million Dollar Baby,” he did not win.


91 posted on 07/27/2007 11:58:54 PM PDT by nenny2006 (Jen Lapuz--http://memoriesofrichard.tripod.com www.richarddavisforpeace.com)
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To: nenny2006

The movie “In the Valley of Elah” is set to release nationwide on September 21st. Please keep in mind that the movie is loosely based on what happened to Richard Davis.

Lanny and Remy Davis have set up a Foundation in honor of their son. The Richard Thomas Davis Foundation For Peace will work as an outreach program to help all military families whose son or daughter have made it home from the war only to turn up missing or murdered. At the present, military red tape makes it almost impossible for these families to get the help they desperately need.

In addition, the foundation will work to facilitate change for the individual soldiers. The issuance of moral waivers have increased dramatically, allowing even violent criminals with gang ties and prior mental health problems to enter into service. Richard’s death is a direct result of these low recruitment standards.

Although Richard’s murder was not the result of PTSD, the Foundation is not overlooking the need to help in this regard. As it stands now, asking for PTSD treatment has a stigma attached to it and therefore many soldiers are ashamed to ask, for fear of being viewed as weak. This stigma can be removed. If the military takes the proactive step of making PTSD counseling and training mandatory, the same as weapons training, it will only serve to make our soldiers stronger and more resilient in both body and mind.

To volunteer and be a part of this important work, please visit the following website:

www.richarddavisforpeace.com


92 posted on 09/17/2007 8:52:14 PM PDT by nenny2006 (Jen Lapuz--http://memoriesofrichard.tripod.com www.richarddavisforpeace.com)
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To: kalmt

THE FORT BENNING SOLDIERS THAT WERE ARRESTED IN THE RICHARD DAVIS CASE, YOU STATED YOU NEW ONE OF THESE MEN MAY I ASK WIHCH ONE OF THESE MEN DID YOU KNOW?


93 posted on 04/10/2008 8:15:52 PM PDT by rangergirl57
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