According to accounts provided to investigators by other soldiers, Green and took several other soldiers with him to a nearby house intending to rape the woman. Green, according to an affidavit submitted by FBI Special Agent Gregor J. Ahlers in support of the arrest warrant, killed the woman's parents and young sister, raped the woman along with another soldier, then shot her in the head and set her body on fire.
There were four soldiers who went to the residence, knowing that the plan was for the girl to be raped. They are referred to in the affidavit as SO12, SO13, Green and KP1. You can read the affidavit for Green's arrest here. Page 6 lays out the events and players.
There was talk at the time that the kidnappings, murders and beheadings of U.S. soldiers in Yousifiya in June of that year were revenge for the March rape and killings in Mahmoudiya.
A jury in Paducah, KY will now decide if Green gets life or death. The AP reported in 2006 that the army knew Green had homicidal tendencies three months before the rape and murders.
Pfc. Steven D. Green was found to have "homicidal ideations" after seeking help from an Army Combat Stress Team in Iraq on Dec. 21, 2005. Green said he was angry about the war, desperate to avenge the death of comrades and driven to kill Iraqi citizens, according to an investigation by The Associated Press.
The treatment was several small doses of Seroquel a drug to regulate his mood and a directive to get some sleep, according to medical records obtained by the AP. The next day, he returned to duty in the particularly violent stretch of desert in the southern Baghdad suburbs known as the "Triangle of Death."
Green was discharged in 2006 as a result of his "personality disorder." Will he escape the death penalty? His lawyers will do their best, having laid the groundwork in the guilt phase for the idea that Green was not the only culprit:
[T]he defense team focused not on whether Green is guilty, but on spreading responsibility for the crime in an effort to avoid a death sentence.
In doing so, they're banking on the idea that the nine-woman, three-man panel will decide that Green shouldn't be put to death because so many people were to blame for the events leading up to the attack.
The strategy: not contesting Green was involved, but minimizing his role and spreading the blame around:
[T]hey've tried to paint the image of a military that mishandled soldiers in trouble with the aim of minimizing how liable Green was for the slayings.
In closing arguments, Wendelsdorf told jurors there was enough evidence to convict Green of second-degree murder, which would carry a lengthy prison sentence, but not a death sentence.
"Did Steven Green uphold the honor of the Army? Hell no," Wendelsdorf said. "Did the Army do its part? I think not."
Will the strategy work? Stay tuned.