Second officer dies in grenade attack by fellow serviceman

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BOISE, Idaho -- A second serviceman has died from wounds suffered when an Army sergeant allegedly tossed three grenades into a command tent of the 101st Airborne Division in Kuwait, the military said.

Air Force Maj. Gregory Stone, 40, based in Boise, was pronounced dead early Tuesday at an Army field hospital in Kuwait, the Idaho Air National Guard said.

Sgt. Asan Akbar is in custody in the attack. He was shipped to a military jail in Germany on Tuesday after a judge found probable cause to try him for the crime. Akbar, an American Muslim who told family members he was wary of going to war in Iraq, has not been charged.

Capt. Christopher Scott Seifert, 27, of Easton, Pa., was killed and 14 other soldiers were injured in the attack.

Stone, a 20-year active and reserve veteran of the Air Force, was Air Force liaison to the 101st, said his half brother, Frank Lenzi of Portland, Ore.

Stone graduated from Portland's Benson High School and Oregon State University. He enlisted in 1983, went through the ROTC program at Oregon State and was commissioned in 1988.

"He was wonderful, the best son anybody could ask for," said his stepmother, Sally Stone of Riggins, Idaho.

Stone's mother, Betty Lenzi of Ontario, Ore., said she was too upset to talk.

Stone is survived by his ex-wife and two sons, who live in Boise.

The Army said Akbar was taken to the Mannheim Confinement Facility from Camp Doha, Kuwait, where he will await a pretrial investigation, though it was not clear where that would take place.

Akbar was taken into custody shortly after explosions rocked several tents at the headquarters of the 101st Airborne Division's 1st Brigade.

"It appears that the explosions were the result of three grenades that were thrown or rolled through the front door of each of these three tents," according to a statement from Fort Campbell, Ky., home of the 101st.

Army investigators will complete a report and send it to Akbar's superiors, said Marc Raimondi, a spokesman for the Army's Criminal Investigation Division in Virginia. He wouldn't speculate on when the investigation would be completed.

Military experts said Akbar could face one charge of intentional murder and additional charges of attempted murder for the wounded.

Eugene Fidell, a Washington lawyer and founder of the National Institute of Military Justice, said the crime could warrant the death penalty, which is rare in the military.

There are six people on the military's death row, but there have been no military executions since 1961.

Akbar's family members in Louisiana said they were stunned to learn that he had been accused of attacking his comrades.

During an interview Tuesday on ABC's "Good Morning America," Ismail Bilal said his brother "spoke just like any other soldier going overseas." Akbar told him, "I would rather be at home. But I got to do my job," Bilal said.

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