I find this article completely mind-blowing. The lousy anti-American terrorist Nidal Hassan who is the one who shot up the Fort Hood base four years ago in an obvious case of Islamic Jihadist terrorism is being paid $80K / year (he has saved over $300K in the four years since the attack) by the US Army as 'salary'.
Now it is preposterous that an enemy combatant who killed in cold blood his so-called team-mates while screaming 'allah akbar' and dressed in his jihad jammies would be charged with 'workplace violence' in the first place. But that he was not immediately ejected from the military for subversive and dangerous insurrection against the military establishment is just mind-blowing. He can sit in his prison cell accumulating thousands of dollars a year without having to do anything, not even shaving his beard (which he made a legal issue out of last year).
Meanwhile the victims of the attack are unable to work, have disabilities which afflict them day and night, and they are unemployed and unable to pay their bills. If the murderer was not accused of 'workplace violence' and instead charged with the correct crime of terrorist acts against this country, the victims would have had their expenses paid for and their families supported. Instead in a supreme case of Sodomite justice this country is rewarding the murderer and punishing the victims...
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/outrage-accused-fort-hood-shooters-300k-pay-spurs/story?id=19747530&google_editors_picks=trueBy NED BERKOWITZ
July 23, 2013
For the nearly four years since Army Maj. Nidal Hasan allegedly gunned down more than a dozen American servicemen, U.S. taxpayers have continued to pay his salary -- to the tune of around $300,000 so far. But new legislation, called the "Stop Pay for Violent Offenders Act" and introduced Monday in the House of Representatives, would authorize the military to suspend pay for Hasan and other members of the military for any capital or sex-related offense.
Current law allows the military to suspend the pay of civilian employees, but an Army spokesperson told ABC News last month that it cannot stop paying Hasan, who is still officially in the Army, at his usual pay grade unless he's convicted. Hasan has admitted to shooting his fellow soldiers, saying in June that the Nov. 5, 2009 attack on Fort Hood in Texas was done in the "defense of others," in his case, the Taliban. Hasan has repeatedly refused to enter a plea, so earlier this month the military pleaded "not guilty" for him.
WATCH Exclusive Video of Fort Hood's Aftermath
While Hasan continues to draw about $80,000 per year, many of the Fort Hood victims say they've been denied financial and medical benefits due to the military's refusal to categorize the massacre as an act of terrorism, instead discussing it as "workplace violence."
READ: Fort Hood Hero Says President Obama 'Betrayed' Her, Other Victims
In addition to his recent admission about his support for the Taliban, soon after the shooting, evidence emerged showing that Hasan was in communication with al Qaeda leader Anwar al-Awlaki prior to the attack. But in a letter in late May, a top Army attorney said that "the available evidence in this case does not, at this time, support a finding that the shooting at Fort Hood was an act of international terrorism."
READ: Hasan Asked Awlaki If It Was Okay to Kill American Soldiers
The new legislation is cosponsored by Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Virg.), Rep. Tim Griffin (R-Ark.), and Rep. Tom Rooney (R-Fla.), who served in the military at Fort Hood before entering politics.
Griffin says it's "particularly troubling" that the Hasan case has taken so long to come to trial, enabling the alleged shooter to draw his salary for such a long time.
After many delays, Hasan's trial is set to get under way on August 6. He is charged with premeditated murder and attempted murder. He is acting as his own attorney, but according to Wolf, the military is footing the bill for legal advisors to assist him in his defense.
According to local news reports, Hasan's court martial has cost the Army about $4 million in personnel and other expenditures.
The new legislation, which also targets those accused of sex-related crimes, comes after recent Congressional hearings derided the military's response to sexual assaults. A recent Pentagon survey found that an estimated 26,000 sexual assaults took place last year.