In response to inquiries about
photos that seemed to record the presence of regular Army troops on the streets of Samson, Alabama, the U.S. Army has released a statement acknowledging that military police were in fact dispatched to the city after the mass murder there, and that an inquiry into the use of those troops is under way.
On the Tenth of March, after a report of the apparent mass murder in Samson, 22 military police soldiers from Fort Rucker, along with the Fort Rucker Provost Martial, were sent to the city of Samson.
The purpose for sending the military police, the authority for doing so, and what duties they performed, is the subject of an ongoing commander's inquiry, directed by the commanding general of the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, General Martin Dempsey.
In addition to determining the facts, this inquiry will also consider whether law, regulation and policy were followed. Until those facts are determined, it would be inappropriate to speculate or comment further.
In the aftermath of this horrific crime spree, the military community of Fort Rucker joins the greater Alabama Wiregrass community in its grief and concern for the victims and their families.
Use of military personnel in a law-enforcement role is a controversial practice, and one that may run afoul of the Posse Comitatus Act. While the restrictions of that law have been eroded over the years, military personnel cannot freely be used in a civilian policing role outside of certain exceptions carved out of the Posse Comitatus Act.
The Army statement, from Colonel Michael Negard of the
Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) headquartered at Fort Monroe, Virgina, while obviously carefully worded, recognizes concerns about the legality of the use of troops in Samson, as well as the political tempest it has already stirred up.
The Posse Comitatus Act dates to the aftermath of the Civil War and Reconstruction, when formerly rebellious regions of the country chafed under military occupation, which imposed direct, armed rule by the federal government. Since the passage of the original law, exceptions have been made for drug law enforcement, natural disasters, insurrections and situations when local governments are unable to protect constitutionally guaranteed rights, but purely civilian law enforcement remains off-limits.