<P>Lance Cpl. Patrick Malone was relaxing on his bunk at an
Iraqi combat base when a direct superior interrupted his late-night
movie.</P> <P>It was time for a game Marines sometimes
play to build confidence in colleagues: Point a gun at a comrade
and ask, "Do you trust me?"</P> <P>Cpl. Mathew Nelson
raised his weapon — and the 9 mm pistol went off,
striking Malone in the head. The higher-ranking Marine rushed to
the wounded man's side and tried to perform CPR, but Malone was
mortally wounded.</P> <P>The game, which has cropped up
in barracks across Iraq and Afghanistan, is supposed to make a
serviceman feel comfortable enough with a comrade that he would
stare into the other Marine's gun barrel. But it violates the
military's basic weapon-safety rules.</P> <P>"I can't
believe the Marines, these professional soldiers, are playing these
games," said Damian Malone, father of the slain
21-year-old.</P> <P>The younger Malone "was willing to
put his life on the line every day, and when he came back to his
unit he wasn't supposed to have to worry about his
safety."</P> <P>On Thursday, Nelson pleaded guilty to
involuntary manslaughter and seven counts of reckless endangerment
for the shooting at Combat Outpost Viking in Anbar province just
before midnight on March 9.</P> <P>Nelson, 25, of
Dearborn Heights, Mich., was sentenced Thursday to eight years in
Camp Lejeune's brig, demoted to the lowest rank in the Marines and
given a bad-conduct discharge.</P> <P>"From the
beginning, my client has been eaten up with remorse," said Vaughan
Taylor, a civilian lawyer who represented Nelson.</P>
<P>Taylor said the two Marines had finished the trust game,
and Nelson turned away. His subordinate, from Ocala, Fla., called
out to tell him he was going to attend to the unit's vehicles
outside.</P> <P>The corporal turned back, pulling the
trigger on the weapon he didn't know was loaded, Taylor
said.</P> <P>The game typically begins when one service
member partially inserts a bullet magazine into the handle of a
pistol and pretends to pull back the gun's slide to make it appear
that the weapon is ready to fire.</P> <P>He then points
the weapon at a fellow service member before either pulling the
trigger or lowering the gun. Typically, even if he pulls the
trigger the weapon will not discharge because a bullet is not in
the chamber.</P> <P>"When you give high-powered weapons
to young men, once in a while bad things are going to happen," said
Gary Solis, a retired Marine lieutenant colonel and attorney who
teaches on the law of armed conflict at West Point and
Georgetown.</P> <P>"You have young men, bored, killing
time with a gun. That's not a good mix," Solis said. "I don't think
the Marines have any corner on this. I think it happens in the
civilian community as well."</P> <P>The Marine Corps
Times reported this week that the game had similar deadly end in
2007, when a Kentucky Army National Guardsman shot and killed a
fellow soldier.</P> <P>The guardsman who fired the
fatal shot later said he learned to play from other members of his
unit while deployed to Iraq in 2006.</P> <P>Damian
Malone believes his son's unit hid the game from their superiors
and claimed they were building trust within the team. But the
practice amounts to a form of hazing that should be wiped out of
the military, he said.</P> <P>Patrick Malone joined the
Marines in 2007 after a year at the University of South Florida and
another year at a community college closer to home. He went to Iraq
in October 2008 as an anti-tank missileman.</P> <P>"I
guess there's a little closure on this because you meet who this
guy was and you see what happened," Damian Malone said after
attending the court-martial with his wife and other family members.
"Now we want to expose this game, wherever it is."</P>
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