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Navy SEAL pleads guilty to manslaughter in "tape job" hazing death of Green Beret

Green Beret death in Mali
2 SEALs under investigation in Green Beret's Mali death 01:54

A U.S. Navy SEAL pleaded guilty Thursday to involuntary manslaughter for his role in the hazing death of a U.S. Army Green Beret while the men were stationed in Africa. Chief Petty Officer Tony DeDolph, a member of the elite SEAL Team 6, also offered a detailed account of the night in which he and other servicemembers initiated a prank known as a "tape job" on Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar.

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This undated photo provided by the U.S. Army shows U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar. U.S. Army

DeDolph told a military judge that the men were trying to teach Melgar a lesson over perceived slights while they served in Mali in 2017. But the SEAL said they were soon "in a state of shock and deeply disturbed" after the duct-tape-bound Melgar remained unresponsive for several minutes.

DeDolph said his role in the prank was to cause Melgar to temporarily lose consciousness by placing him in a martial-arts-style chokehold. DeDolph said the "rear naked choke" restricts blood flow in the neck and is used in the military.

"I effectively applied the chokehold as I have done numerous times in training, with combatants and has been done to me," DeDolph said.

Melgar lost consciousness in about 10 seconds, but failed to wake up after the typical 30 seconds, the SEAL said.

"Usually by that time, the individual has gotten up," DeDolph said. "And he did not."

DeDolph pleaded guilty inside a military courtroom at a Navy base in Norfolk, Virginia. He is the third of four U.S. service members - two SEALs and two Marines - to face a court martial for the death of Melgar, a Texas native.

The case has pulled back the curtain on misconduct among some of America's most elite service members, while offering a brief window into how some have addressed grievances outside the law.

Charging documents don't state why the service members were in Bamako, Mali. But U.S. Special Forces have been in Africa to support and train local troops in their fight against extremists.

Adam Matthews, a SEAL who pleaded guilty for his role in Melgar's death in 2019, testified previously that two Marines felt Melgar abandoned them while driving in separate vehicles in an unsafe place. DeDolph said Wednesday that Melgar "had ditched" service members as a "prank."

The idea of pranking Melgar in return started off as a joke, but the talk escalated throughout the night, DeDolph said.

"It was more of like a pack mentality, group decision," he said.

DeDolph said the plan included breaking down Melgar's door with a sledge hammer for effect, binding him with duct tape and performing the chokehold. Someone was supposed to dance around in a gorilla mask. And video of the incident was supposed to be taken.

Besides involuntary manslaughter, DeDolph pleaded guilty to hazing, conspiracy and obstruction of justice for trying to cover up the cause of Melgar's death. His case moves into the sentencing phase next week, during which prosecutors and defense attorneys can call witnesses before a jury of his peers.

DeDolph faces a maximum sentence of 22 1/2 years in prison, losing rank and dishonorable discharge.

Prosecutors have recommended an undisclosed sentence in a pretrial agreement. The jury will also recommend a sentence. A convening authority within the military will chose the lesser of the two.

CBS News correspondent David Martin reported that neither the Pentagon nor the U.S. Africa Command announced Melgar's death, apparently because it would reveal the presence of special operations forces in Mali. Melgar was a member of the same special forces group as the four Americans who were killed while on patrol in the neighboring country of Niger in 2017.

The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) fighters who ambushed and killed the four soldiers were based in Mali and escaped back across the border.  

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