The hearing resumes Tuesday
laser pen morning and is expected to continue at least through the end of the week.
After the Article 32 hearing ends, investigating officer Col. Morgan Lamb will make recommendations on taking the case to trial and whether the
laser for sale military should seek the death penalty.
Lamb is the Fort Hood brigade commander
red Laser Pointers appointed to oversee judicial matters in Hasan's case.
An Article 32 hearing is the military equivalent of a civilian grand jury review.
Sgt, 1st Class Miguel Valdivia was among the shooting survivors who testified Monday.
He went to the center as his unit prepared to deploy
100mw laser pointers to Afghanistan and was picking up medical records when the shooting started.
"Somebody, the person on the right
laser for sale side of my eyesight shouted in a foreign language, I couldn't understand.”
“The person was standing next to the front door,
100mw laser pointers he started shooting,” he said.
"He jumped, said something out loud and he pointed people, started shooting people in the waiting area,” he said.
Valdivia said at first he thought
laser pen it was a training exercise of some sort.
"I realized it wasn't a drill when I saw my own blood,” he said.
"He shot me three times,” he said.
"He was looking at me like a drill
laser for sale sergeant looked at me at boot camp. He wasn't happy."
Spc. Dayna Roscoe was also
red Laser Pointers injured in the shooting.
She testified that at first she wasn’t sure what was happening.
Then she said she heard someone saying “my baby, my baby, my baby,” and
laser for sale someone else saying, “this is real, he has a gun.”
She said she covered her face, putting her arms up to protect herself.
She was shot in the left arm,
laser pen but says if she hadn’t raised her arms, she would have been hit in the chest.
She said she was shot two
100mw laser pointers more times before the gunman left the building.
She described another female soldier who was on the floor of the center.
"She had been shot in her abdomen…she wanted someone to tell her family that she loved them because she didn't think she would survive,” Roscoe said.
Pvt. Francheska Velez, 21, of Chicago, was the pregnant soldier who cried out, "My baby, my baby," before she died.
She became pregnant while serving
red Laser Pointers in Iraq and was
wholesale among the 13 killed in the shooting.
Spc. Jonathan Sims testified that Velez had just told him that she was was expecting a baby and was preparing to go home when the first shots rang
Sims says Velez curled into a fetal
red Laser Pointers position and screamed for
her unborn baby's life as others crawled under desks, dodged
bullets that pierced walls
wholesale and rushed to help their bleeding
comrades.