Army: no bullet wound found in soldier Skype death
Army: no bullet wound found in soldier Skype death
WASHINGTON (AP) — Army investigators said Monday they found no bullet wound nor evidence of foul play in the death of a soldier in Afghanistan who died during a Skype video chat with his wife.
Capt. Bruce Kevin Clark collapsed while speaking to his wife on May 1 from his base in Tarin Kot, Afghanistan, southwest of Kabul. His wife, Susan Orellana-Clark, has suggested that Clark was shot, citing a hole visible in the closet behind him that she believed was a bullet hole.
Investigators said an initial probe showed no trauma to the body except that Clark broke his nose when he fell forward. Orellana-Clark said he didn't seem alarmed before he collapsed.
Christopher Grey, a spokesman for the Army Criminal Investigation Command, said Monday that the investigation is still under way.
"But the important thing is that there was no bullet wound, no trauma," except that Clark's nose was possibly broken when he fell on his desk, Grey said in a telephone interview.
"We can positively say that Captain Clark was not shot," Grey later said in a statement.
An autopsy was done Friday but it could take several weeks to get results of toxicology and tissue testing done at that time, Paul Stone, a spokesman for the Armed Forces Medical Examiner, said Monday.
Clark's family released a statement Sunday describing what his wife saw in the video feed recording her husband's death.
"The closet behind him had a bullet hole in it," the statement said, adding that others, including a member of the military who came to Orellana-Clark's Texas home, also believed it was a bullet hole.
The statement says the Skype link remained open for two hours after Clark collapsed as family and friends in the U.S. and Afghanistan tried to get Clark help. Although it was the night of Monday, April 30, at his El Paso, Texas, home, Clark's time of death is officially listed as May 1, the date in Afghanistan at the time.
"After two hours and many frantic phone calls by Mrs. Clark, two military personnel arrived in the room and appeared to check his pulse, but provided no details about his condition to his wife," the statement said
- safari 2012/05/08 13:36:47
+1This is such a tragic story - I hope the family will be able to have peace soon.reply - alanh 2012/05/08 13:01:53
+1That is just a nightmare for the wife. Horrible thing to see.reply - sockpuppet 2012/05/07 19:39:05
+1What a nightmare... witness something like that from the other side of the world.reply - DS in Oak Ridge NC 2012/05/07 18:59:33
We need to wait until the facts are in. Autopsy + tox screens will indicate a cause of death. Even the wife's account did not mention hearing a bullet striking. I'd guess cardiac event or stroke, given the stress of duty in Afghansitan and being away from loved ones.reply -
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