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REUTERS
FORT BRAGG
A military judge will weigh whether President Donald Trump's critical statements about US Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl have hurt the soldier's chances of getting fair treatment in the desertion case that could send him to prison for life.
Bergdahl's lead attorney, Eugene Fidell, argued on Monday that the 31-year-old Idaho native should be spared prison time because the Republican president has unlawfully influenced the proceedings.
"His statements clearly called for Sergeant Bergdahl to be severely punished," Fidell said in court at North Carolina's Fort Bragg.
Bergdahl pleaded guilty last week to walking off his combat outpost in Afghanistan in June 2009 and endangering the lives of fellow troops. He was quickly captured by the Taliban and spent the next five years suffering torture, abuse and neglect in captivity.
His sentencing proceedings were due to get underway on Monday but were postponed until Wednesday due to a family emergency for a lawyer in the case.
The one-hour hearing instead focused on Trump, who during last year's presidential campaign called Bergdahl"a no-good traitor who should have been executed."
The Army judge in the case, Colonel Jeffery Nance, has previously ruled the comments by the then-candidate were"disturbing" but refused to dismiss the case.
On Monday, Fidell played a video of Trump's Oct. 16 press conference in the White House's Rose Garden, where a reporter asked whether the president thought his prior comments had hurt Bergdahl's ability to receive a fair trial.
Trump said he could not comment, then added,"But I think people have heard my comments in the past."
Major Justin Oshana, a prosecutor in the case, said Trump's remarks should not be taken as evidence that he has the same attitude about Bergdahl now as during the campaign.
The judge said when he denied the motion to dismiss in February, he believed the public would see Trump's earlier statements as campaign rhetoric.
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24/10/2017
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