Bradley Manning Emailed Photo Of Himself In Woman's Wig To Supervisor

Bradley Manning Emailed Photo Of Himself In Woman's Wig In Call For Help
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FORT MEADE, MD - JULY 30: U.S. Army Private First Class Bradley Manning is escorted by military police as he leaves his military trial after he was found guilty of 20 out of 21 charges, July 30, 2013 Fort George G. Meade, Maryland. Manning, was found not guilty of aiding the enemy, was convicted of wrongfully causing intelligence to be published on the internet, is accused of sending hundreds of thousands of classified Iraq and Afghanistan war logs and more than 250,000 diplomatic cables to the website WikiLeaks while he was working as an intelligence analyst in Baghdad in 2009 and 2010. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

FORT MEADE, Md. -- The subject of the email was "My problem."

"I've had signs of it for a very long time," Bradley Manning wrote. "It caused conditions within my family. I thought a career in the military would get rid of it. ... But it's not going away, it's haunted me more and more as I get older."

There was a photograph attached. Sitting in a car, looking anguished, Manning stares into the camera's lens. He is wearing a blonde wig and makeup.

Lawyer David Coombs showed that picture of his client on Tuesday during the second day of defense witnesses' testimony in the sentencing phase of the WikiLeaks source's court martial. As Manning faces a maximum 90-year sentence, Coombs is attempting a delicate balancing act: Show that the Army's chain of command broke down in allowing his troubled client access to classified information, while not pathologizing away his claim of being a whistleblower.

Coombs is trying to show, as he put it in a pretrial filing, that Manning did "the right thing for the right reason but under flawed reasoning," and that if the Army didn't stop him, it was in part its own fault.

In nearly two hours of intense testimony on Tuesday, Coombs examined Paul Adkins, at the time the master sergeant responsible for discipline within Manning's small intelligence unit and the recipient of Manning's email. Adkins has been humbled by his interactions with Manning; he had his rank reduced as a result of the Army investigation into the leaks, and he was repeatedly criticized during the trial for his lax leadership style.

Adkins spoke haltingly, but the takeaway was clear. The red flags started well before that tormented April 24, 2010, email, before Manning sent the Iraq or Afghanistan war logs to WikiLeaks, and even before he was deployed to Iraq in October 2009.

In June or July 2009, Manning had an "angry outburst" after he was counseled for being late to formation.

Well aware of Manning's mental health issues, Adkins considered not sending him to Iraq. But another soldier in the intelligence unit of Manning's 2nd Brigade Combat Team had a heart attack, which meant he was already staying behind.

"I would say there was that indirect pressure of making sure that anyone who could physically deploy was deploying," Adkins said. "In a perfect world, I think if I could have left him back to make sure that he was getting behavioral health care on a consistent basis, I would have."

Instead, Manning was deployed to Iraq. The prosecution and defense have presented different narratives during the trial about whether he started making disclosures to WikiLeaks almost immediately, around Thanksgiving 2009, or whether he began in January 2010.

By either timeline, however, had Adkins alerted his supervisors to warning signs about Manning, he might have had his security clearance revoked before sending WikiLeaks the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs, hundreds of thousands of State Department cables, Guantanamo detainee assessment files, and the "collateral murder" video of an Apache helicopter strike in Baghdad.

Before any of those leaks was transmitted to WikiLeaks, during a counseling session in December, Manning flipped a table with two computers on it and allegedly headed for a weapons rack.

"I grabbed him and put him in a full nelson," said Chief Warrant Officer 2 Joshua Ehresman, who testified prior to Adkins on Tuesday.

Ehresman and others told Adkins about that dramatic incident, but Adkins did nothing. Adkins also did not react to the chair-flipping incident, nor did he inform his superiors about the April 2010 email with the photo of Manning in the wig attached.

At the time, the military's don't ask, don't tell policy banning service members from telling their colleagues that they were gay was in place. Transgender military members are still forced to serve in secret to this day. But neither Coombs nor Adkins referenced those policies in court.

"I don't remember exactly why I didn't recommend the clearance be removed, specifically," Adkins said. "But ... I felt that his presence and his -- what he provided to us as an intelligence section was important enough to retain him."

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Before You Go

Guantanamo Bay Revelations From WikiLeaks
Abuse Of Prisoners (01 of09)
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As the New York Times reports, Mohammed Qahtani -- a Saudi believed to have been an intended participant in the Sept. 11 attacks -- was subject to coercive questioning and other abuses during his interrogation. The cables describe Qahtani as being leashed like a dog, sexually humiliated and forced to urinate on himself. His file says, "Although publicly released records allege detainee was subject to harsh interrogation techniques in the early stages of detention," his confessions "appear to be true and are corroborated in reporting from other sources." (credit:Getty )
Arbitrary Nature Of Prison System (02 of09)
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As Le Monde is reporting, one "low-value" Iranian-Catholic detainee was kept in Guantanamo even after being deemed ready for release -- given his "cooperative nature" and in the interest of "possible financing relations" between Al Qaeda and traffickers. According to the cables, Abdul Majid Muhammed was deemed fit for release in 2002: "The detainee is not affiliated with Al Qaeda or the Taliban. He was involved in drug trafficking. It is unlikely that he represents a risk for the U.S. or its allies." (credit:Getty )
High-Profile Detainee (03 of09)
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An Al Jazeera journalist was reportedly held at Guantanamo Bay for six years partially so he could be interrogated about the network Sami al-Hajj, a Sudanese national and Al Jazeera cameraman, was captured in Pakistan in late 2001. Though he was never convicted or even tried of any terrorist ties, al-Hajj was held until 2008 because interrogators wanted to find out more about "the al-Jazeera news network's training programme, telecommunications equipment, and newsgathering operations in Chechnya, Kosovo and Afghanistan, including the network's acquisition of a video of UBL [Osama bin Laden] and a subsequent interview with UBL," according to the cables. (credit:Getty )
Violent Threats Against Captors (04 of09)
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Some detainees are described as ruthlessly violent in the documents. As the New York Times reports, one detainee said "he would like to tell his friends in Iraq to find the interrogator, slice him up, and make a shwarma (a type of sandwich) out of him, with the interrogator's head sticking out of the end of the shwarma." Another "threatened to kill a U.S. service member by chopping off his head and hands when he gets out," and informed a guard that "he will murder him and drink his blood for lunch. Detainee also stated he would fly planes into houses and prayed that President Bush would die." (credit:Getty )
New Details On Post-9/11 Al Qaeda Whereabouts (05 of09)
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As the Washington Postreports, the documents describe a major gathering of some of Al Qaeda's most senior operatives in early December 2001. They included Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the self-described mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks; Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the alleged planner of the USS Cole attack; and Abu Faraj al-Libbi, a key facilitator for bin Laden. After returning to Karachi, Mohammed "put together a training program for assassinations and kidnappings as well as pistol and computer training." (credit:AP)
"Nuclear Hellstorm' Threat(06 of09)
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The leaked files indicate Khalid Sheikh Mohammed told Guantanamo Bay interrogators that Al Qaeda had hidden a nuclear bomb in Europe which will unleash a "nuclear hellstorm" if Osama bin Laden is captured or killed. The terror group also planned to make a 9/11 style attack on London's Heathrow airport by crashing a hijacked airliner into one of the terminals, the files showed. (credit:AP)
'Impotence-Promoting' Drugs (07 of09)
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The Washington Post reports Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the alleged planner of the USS Cole attack, "received injections to promote impotence" to avoid being distracted by women, and "recommended the injections to others so more time could be spent on the jihad." (credit:Getty )
Prisoner Details And Ranking System (08 of09)
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Gitmo detainees are reportedly assessed "high," "medium" or "low" in terms of their intelligence value, the threat they pose while in detention and the continued threat they might pose to the United States if released. As Reuters reports, most of the 172 remaining prisoners have been rated as a "high risk" of posing a threat to the United States and its allies if released without adequate rehabilitation and supervision. (credit:Getty )
'Terrorist Organizations' (09 of09)
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Gitmo authorities named Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency a "terrorist organization" along with Hamas and other international militant networks, according to leaked documents. As the Associated Press reports, the ISI is part of a list that includes more than 60 international militant networks, as well as Iran's intelligence services, that are "terrorist" entities or associations and say detainees linked to them "may have provided support to Al Qaeda and the Taliban, or engaged in hostilities against U.S. and coalition forces." (credit:AP )