How wounds suffered in search for Bergdahl changed 3 lives

Three men who were wounded while searching for Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl will be included in the case against him

Three men who were wounded while searching for Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl will be included in the case against him.

One soldier who searched for Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl uses a wheelchair now, unable to speak because of a head wound. 

Another still can’t fully use his right hand. 

Still another searcher saw a leg wound from enemy fire end his career as a Navy SEAL.

Those wounds are expected to be considered by the judge who will determine Bergdahl’s punishment on charges that he endangered his comrades by walking off his post in Afghanistan in 2009. 

The sentencing hearing opens Monday for Bergdahl, who pleaded guilty to misbehavior before the enemy and desertion.

Bergdahl pleaded guilty to misbehavior before the enemy and desertion. His sentencing hearing begins Monday. He is pictured being escorted into the court house in Fort Bragg, North Carolina on October 16

Bergdahl pleaded guilty to misbehavior before the enemy and desertion. His sentencing hearing begins Monday. He is pictured being escorted into the court house in Fort Bragg, North Carolina on October 16

Army National Guard Master Sgt. Mark Allen 

Army National Guard Master Sgt. Mark Allen was shot in the head while searching for Bergdahl

Army National Guard Master Sgt. Mark Allen was shot in the head while searching for Bergdahl

Army National Guard Master Sgt. Mark Allen had already served in Iraq and could have begged off another deployment, a family friend said.

‘He told me that he was coming back to a frontline unit because they were going to be deployed and he didn’t want his guys to go alone,’ said Robert Stokely.

Deployed to Afghanistan, Allen was shot in the head in July 2009 while searching for Bergdahl. The traumatic brain injury dramatically changed life for Allen, his wife and two children. Once an avid outdoorsman, Allen depends on a wheelchair and can’t speak.

Allen’s wife, Shannon, declined to be interviewed. But the toll was evident as she sat crying in the courtroom the day Bergdahl pleaded guilty.

Before being wounded, Allen gave words of support to Stokely after his son – National Guard Sgt. Michael Stokely – died in Iraq in 2005.

‘If you want to look at the best America has to offer, look at the Allen family,’ Robert Stokely said.

After Allen's traumatic brain injury, he now  depends on a wheelchair and can't speak

After Allen’s traumatic brain injury, he now  depends on a wheelchair and can’t speak

Allen is pictured above with his wife and daughter. His wife sat crying in the courtroom the day Bergdahl pleaded guilty

Allen is pictured above with his wife and daughter. His wife sat crying in the courtroom the day Bergdahl pleaded guilty

Army Corporal Jonathan Morita 

Jonathan Morita of California, who served as an Army corporal, was reservist and Iraq veteran taking college classes when he was recalled for Afghanistan duty.

‘I was at home enjoying life as a civilian – going to school, working at a job,’ he said by phone earlier this year.

During the search mission that left Allen wounded, a rocket-propelled grenade shattered Morita’s hand. The projectile didn’t explode, but he needed multiple surgeries.

Morita can’t bend the thumb or index finger on his right hand. He’s had to learn again how to brush his teeth and write.

‘Imagine doing things with your three fingers,’ Morita said. ‘I can’t even change the oil on my car.’

He said he’s trying to live as normally as possible, but still feels anger toward Bergdahl: ‘Every time I hit my finger on something, there’s only one image that pops in my head, and it’s him.’

In a second interview, Morita said he was struck by Bergdahl’s comment in court that he didn’t think such a large search would be mounted for him.

‘I manned those missions,’ he said. ‘I mean anybody who’s ever watched ‘Black Hawk Down’ would know that we do that.’

Senior Chief Petty Officer James Hatch 

Retired Senior Chief Petty Officer James Hatch, a former Navy SEAL, said his team had 90 minutes to plan a separate search mission under poor conditions. But he felt the mission was crucial.

‘I did not want Sgt. Bergdahl’s mother to see her son executed on YouTube,’ Hatch said in a statement.

Their helicopters came under fire as they were landing to search near the Pakistan border.

Hatch testified his leg was hit by AK-47 fire, and a military dog that helped locate enemy fighters was killed. He now runs a nonprofit providing care and support for military and law enforcement dogs.

He credits survival to team members who quickly applied a tourniquet. ‘They saved me from bleeding to death,’ said Hatch, who entered the pretrial hearing limping.

Retired Navy SEAL James Hatch’s leg wound from enemy fire while searching for Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl ended his career as a Navy SEAL, He is pictured wearing a bite suit helps train a Norfolk K-9 unit dog in Norfolk, Virginia

Hatch sits in the living room with his dogs from left: Thomek, a German Shepherd, Pearl, a Pit Bull and Pepe, a Black Lab

Hatch’s wounds and others will be weighed by the judge in determining Bergdahl’s punishment on charges that he endangered his comrades by walking off his post in Afghanistan in 2009

Bergdahl has previously claimed he left his post so that he could report his ‘unfit’ platoon commander to senior officers, in taped conversations which aired on the podcast Serial.

The Taliban captured Bergdahl after he went AWOL and held him captive for five years, before President Obama secured his release in exchange for five Taliban prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2014. 

In an interview released on Sunday, Bergdahl whined that the US treated him worse than his Taliban captors.

‘At least the Taliban were honest enough to say, “I’m the guy who’s gonna cut your throat”,’ the 31-year-old Army sergeant told the The Sunday Times of London.

‘Here, it could be the guy I pass in the corridor who’s going to sign the paper that sends me away for life,’ the Army deserter griped in the interview, which was recorded last year and is his first video interview since returning to the US.

‘We may as well go back to kangaroo courts and lynch mobs.’ 

 The Taliban captured Bergdahl after he went AWOL and held him captive for five years, before President Obama exchanged him for five Taliban prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2014

 The Taliban captured Bergdahl after he went AWOL and held him captive for five years, before President Obama exchanged him for five Taliban prisoners at Guantanamo Bay in 2014

BOWE BERGDAHL: A TIMELINE 

Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl spent five years in captivity in Afghanistan after deserting his post.

A look at key events from his capture until now:

June 2009 – Bergdahl, who is serving with an Alaska-based infantry regiment, vanishes from a base in Afghanistan’s Paktika province near the border of Pakistan.

July 2009 – The Taliban post video online showing Bergdahl saying he is ‘scared I won’t be able to go home.’ Bergdahl says he was lagging behind a patrol when he was captured.

December 2009 – The Taliban release a video showing Bergdahl apparently healthy and making a lengthy statement criticizing the U.S. military operation.

June 2013 – The Taliban propose a deal in which they would free Bergdahl in exchange for five of their most senior operatives at Guantanamo Bay.

May 2014 – Obama administration officials announce Bergdahl has been handed over to U.S. special forces by the Taliban in exchange for the release of five Guantanamo detainees. Debate quickly rises over whether Bergdahl is a hero or a deserter.

June 2014 – The Army says it is investigating the facts and circumstances around Bergdahl’s disappearance.

December 2014 – The Army says it has finished its investigation.

March 2015 – Bergdahl is charged with desertion and misbehavior before the enemy.

October 2017 – Bergdahl pleads guilty to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy.

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