Feral Jundi

Monday, June 6, 2011

Afghanistan: New Century Contractors Credited For Stopping Attack On 3-Star SEAL’s Osprey During Jailbreak

McGonigle was a retired Irish police officer serving as a consultant with New Century, a private security firm based in London that advises Afghan forces. He and another unidentified British contractor are credited with opening fire on the escaped detainees after seeing one of them aiming the RPG launcher, forcing them to take cover and abandon targeting the Osprey.
“The initial actions of [name redacted] and Ken McGonigle diverted a potential disaster by engaging the armed individuals leaving the DETFAC,” the report said. “The individual carrying the RPG was in a launch posture aiming in the direction of the LZ.”

When this happened last year, there wasn’t a lot of details about the incident. I did a post about the death of McGonigle, and found a little information about New Century. But now that a FOIA was filed and these details are front and center, I think it is appropriate to recognize the heroic actions of these contractors whose actions ‘diverted a potential disaster’. –Matt

Edit: 06/09/2011 – I received an email from a reader that identified a mistake in this newspaper. Here it is:

Ken was a member of the Royal Ulster Constabularly (RUC), he was from a village outside of Londonderry.  He was not an Irish police officer but a British one.

Ken McGonigle

3-star SEAL’s Osprey targeted in jailbreak
By Dan Lamothe
Monday Jun 6, 2011
Two detainees escaped from a detention facility on a Marine base in Afghanistan, then used a grenade launcher to target an MV-22 Osprey about to take off with a three-star Navy SEAL on board, Marine Corps Times has learned.
Vice Adm. Robert Hardward was in the Osprey on base Aug. 7 after visiting the headquarters of 1st Battalion, 2nd Marines, in the Musa Qala district of Helmand province. He heads Joint Task Force 435, which oversees detainee operations in Afghanistan, and has been nominated to replace Marine Lt. Gen. John Allen as the deputy commander of U.S. Central Command. Allen is expected to become the top commander in Afghanistan this fall.
The details are outlined in an investigation report obtained by Marine Corps Times through the Freedom of Information Act. Marine officials in Afghanistan said last summer that two Marines and a contractor were shot to death by a detainee who escaped from an Afghan-run detention center. However, it was not disclosed that a detainee had taken aim at the landing zone with a grenade launcher, or that Harward was on base when the detainees escaped.

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Friday, November 6, 2009

Law Enforcement: The Hero That Took Down Hasan–Sergeant Kimberly Munley

Filed under: Law Enforcement,Texas — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 5:55 PM

   The tragedy at Ft. Hood the other day is a hard one to comprehend and accept.  It happened, and it was awful. That is really all I have to say about the act itself.

   What I want to point out was the hero that took Hasan down.  It was a female police officer, who charged this animal in a hail of bullets and stopped him.  She also took two shots to the legs, one in each thigh, and she deserves the highest praise.  Matter of fact, everyone involved with stopping Hasan, and administering aid to the wounded deserves our highest praise.  That is my take away on this tragedy. –Matt

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Kimberly

Officer Who Shot Suspect Is Firearms Expert

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

November 7, 2009

KILLEEN, Tex. — The police officer who brought down a gunman after he went on a shooting rampage at the Fort Hood Army base was on the way to have her car repaired when she heard a report over a police radio that someone was shooting people in a center where soldiers are processed before they are deployed abroad, authorities said on Friday.

As she pulled up to the center, the officer, Kimberly Munley, spotted the gunman, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, brandishing a pistol and chasing a wounded soldier outside the building, said Chuck Medley, the director of emergency services at the base.

Sergeant Munley bolted from her car and shot at Major Hasan. He turned toward her and began to fire. She ran toward him, continuing to fire, and both she and the gunmen went down with several bullet wounds, Mr. Medley said.

Whether Sergeant Munley was solely responsible for taking down Major Hassan or whether he was also hit by gunfire from another responder is still unclear, but she was the first to fire at him.

Sergeant Munley, who is 34, is an expert in firearms and a member of the SWAT team for the civilian police department on the base, officials said.

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