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    Home»Featured

    Fort Hood razes 2009 massacre site

    webmasterBy webmasterFebruary 19, 2014Updated:February 19, 2014 Featured No Comments3 Mins Read
    This undated photo provided by the Fort Hood Public Affairs Office shows Building 42003 being demolished in Fort Hood, Texas. Fort Hood officials said Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014, that they have torn down Building 42003, the site of a 2009 massacre that left 13 people dead and more than 30 wounded. They plan to place trees, a gazebo and a memorial plaque at the site.(AP Photo/Fort Hood Public Affairs Office)
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    This undated photo provided by the Fort Hood Public Affairs Office shows Building 42003 being demolished in Fort Hood, Texas. Fort Hood officials said Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014, that they have torn down Building 42003, the site of a 2009 massacre that left 13 people dead and more than 30 wounded. They plan to place trees, a gazebo and a memorial plaque at the site.(AP Photo/Fort Hood Public Affairs Office)
    This undated photo provided by the Fort Hood Public Affairs Office shows Building 42003 being demolished in Fort Hood, Texas. Fort Hood officials said Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014, that they have torn down Building 42003, the site of a 2009 massacre that left 13 people dead and more than 30 wounded. They plan to place trees, a gazebo and a memorial plaque at the site.(AP Photo/Fort Hood Public Affairs Office)
    By Nomaan Merchant
    Associated Press

    DALLAS — A Texas Army post has razed the building where a former psychiatrist carried out one of the worst mass shootings in U.S. history, with plans to put up trees and a memorial in its place.
    Fort Hood officials said Tuesday that they have torn down Building 42003, the site of a 2009 massacre that left 13 people dead and more than 30 wounded.

    The building was part of a processing center complex for soldiers deploying and returning from combat. On Nov. 5, 2009, then-Maj. Nidal Hasan carried two weapons inside, shouted “Allahu Akbar!” — “God is great” in Arabic — and opened fire on soldiers waiting for vaccines and paperwork.

    As soldiers and civilians tried to take cover, Hasan walked through the building, targeting anyone in a green Army uniform. He left pools of blood and spent ammunition in his wake. He was eventually confronted outside the building by Fort Hood police officers, who shot him and paralyzed him from the waist down.

    Hasan was convicted in August of charges related to the massacre and sentenced to death. He is on death row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., while his case goes through a review at Fort Hood before it enters a series of mandatory appeals.

    The building was sealed off for nearly four years until post officials announced in November that they would demolish it.
    Fort Hood officials, who declined to be interviewed, plan to place trees, a gazebo and a memorial plaque at the site.

    Not all victims and their relatives agree with them. Kathy Platoni, an Army reservist who saw her friend, Capt. John Gaffaney, bleed to death, was one of the people who called on Fort Hood to keep the building standing as a reminder of what happened.

    Platoni found out about the demolition Tuesday in a mass email from the post.

    While post spokesman Chris Haug said he believed family members and victims were consulted about what to do with the site, Platoni said Army officials had not asked her opinion.

    Platoni mentioned other points of contention between the Army and the Fort Hood victims, including a prolonged fight for increased benefits and recognition due to what many victims say is a terrorist attack, despite the Army’s insistence that the shooting was an act of workplace violence.

    “For the building in which this horrific event took place just to be wiped off the map before we have a say in what’s done with it seems like another slap in the face,” Platoni told The Associated Press Tuesday afternoon.

    She described her shock at watching video of the building being torn down. Asked if the video provided any closure, she said no.

    “I don’t think there will be closure until Nidal Hasan has left the face of this earth, and even more importantly than that, the families of the deceased and the wounded receive all of the benefits (they deserve),” Platoni said. “Then there will be closure.”

    webmaster

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