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Associated PressPat Tillman's mother recalls journey for facts in new bookBy SCOTT LINDLAW and MARTHA MENDOZA (Associated Press Writers)
From Associated Press
May 12, 2008 7:50 PM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO - The mother of a former professional football player who who died while serving in the Army Rangers suspects the military's account of how fellow soldiers shot and killed her son in Afghanistan is still not the true story, four years later, according to her new book. The Army told the family and public that Pat Tillman died in an enemy ambush April 22, 2004. The military knew within hours that friendly fire was involved but waited five weeks before disclosing it, in violation of military regulations. The Associated Press and other news organizations have reported on the investigation into Tillman's death, but lawmakers granted Mary Tillman access to uncensored versions of some documents that were not available to journalists.
"Boots on the Ground by Dusk: My Tribute to Pat Tillman," just issued by Modern Times books, is based on her review of those documents and charts the Tillman family's efforts to cut through misleading official accounts of how the former football player died. Tillman had walked away from a contract with the Arizona Cardinals to enlist after the September 2001 terrorist attacks.
Citing documents and eyewitness accounts, Mrs. Tillman says she strongly suspects the men who shot her son stepped out of a Humvee to aim carefully at him. They were not, as official accounts have asserted, speeding by on a bumpy mountain road. The shooters denied this. At one Army briefing, Mrs. Tillman vents frustration and incredulity at lead investigator Brig. Gen. Gary Jones. He had dismissed the account of Spc. Bryan O'Neal, who was just a few feet away from Tillman when the Rangers lit up their position with gunfire. "No one got out of the vehicle. That early information is incorrect, and O'Neal is the least reliable witness because he was so traumatized," Jones tells Mrs. Tillman, according to the author. "You won't believe O'Neal, but you'll believe the guys who were shooting at him!" Mrs. Tillman says.
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Mrs. Tillman reserves special contempt for Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, currently the commander of the "black ops" Joint Special Operations Command. Just a day after approving a Silver Star medal claiming Tillman had been cut down by "devastating enemy fire," McChrystal tried to secretly warn President George W. Bush that the story might not be true. The AP obtained and published the memo last year. "Not only is he lying about the circumstances surrounding Pat's death, as enemy fire had ceased many minutes before, he is proposing false language for the Silver Star narrative," Mrs. Tillman writes of the Silver Star language. "The false narrative, which McChrystal clearly helped construct, diminished Pat's true actions."
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