![]() ![]() Shot from the perspective of the soldiers taking fire from what they clearly believe is an American tank, the footage shows how Pfc. Feggins watched the video with me in her den. soldiers in Ramadi, Iraq, in late 2006, and that the Army ignored the video and other persuasive data in order to rule that the deaths were due to enemy action. Salon has obtained evidence - including a graphic, 52-and-a-half minute video - suggesting that friendly fire from an American tank killed two U.S. She did not know that there was a video of his death until I contacted her recently. ![]() ![]() "They were still doing their investigation. I'd be told they are still working on the report," she said. "I would ask the casualty officer what was going on. "I always felt like they were lying to me," she said. She says she never believed the Army's explanation. Albert Nelson died in Iraq in 2006, the Army first told Feggins that he might have been killed by friendly fire, and then that it was enemy mortars. "Listen, I've moved dead bodies of people I don't even know," she told me, as she sat on a brown couch in the den of her West Philadelphia row house. Asked if she wanted to see a graphic battle video showing her son Albert bleeding to death, Jean Feggins, retired from the Philadelphia Police Department, said yes. ![]()
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