SFC Frederic Nicholas "Nic" Moses May 6, 1985 - March 15, 2012



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Nic had completed three deployments to Iraq between 2007 and 2011 and most recently was deployed to Baghlan-e-Jadid, Afghanistan from January through February 2012 in support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM XVIII. Nic arrived back to Fort Campbell on March 6th 2012 for another short training cycle and was then scheduled to return to Afghanistan to rejoin his team. For that, he was charged with "reckless homicide" instead of murder, and was sentenced to the maximum penalty: four years in prison. The incident happened in March 2012. Moses, a St. Charles native and decorated Green Beret who had served four tours in Afghanistan, was in Clarksville, Tennessee, for training exercises at nearby Fort Campbell. Schweitzer, an army medic, was a guest in the house Moses shared with other soldiers. The two were stationed together at Fort Campbell as part of the 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne). When the attending officers kicked down the bedroom door, Schweitzer fired multiple shots and hit officer James Eure in the arm, the Leaf Chronicle reported. Schweitzer eventually surrendered after a standoff. The Leaf Chronicle says Schweitzer testified that he had taken some ketamine, a powerful anesthetic. The Clarksville paper also says that he had been depressed because of a recent demotion. Ketamine is sometimes used in treating depression, but it appears that Schweitzer was self-medicating because he says he took it after he "researched [it] as a medic." Schweitzer was originally charged with second-degree murder for the death of Moses and two counts of attempted first-degree murder for shooting at the cops, but a jury found him not guilty of those charges in April. They did, however, find him guilty of the far lesser charges of reckless homicide and reckless endangerment. The maximum penalty he would face is four years in prison. The Post-Dispatch reported in September on the shock that verdict caused for Moses' family: When the jury read the verdict on August 22, Paul Moses, the victim's brother, said it felt like the room started spinning. "It was totally surreal; it was beyond comprehension," he said. Fred Moses yelled across the courtroom at his son's killer: "You're going to burn in Hell." Nic Moses' mother, Jeanie, said she was in shock for five days after the verdict and could barely function. "Then the anger started to set in," she said. Schweitzer was finally sentenced Tuesday and got the maximum of four years for reckless homicide. And since he has been in custody for more than a year, he was credited with time served for the reckless homicide charges. "Time served, sentence satisfied," a Clarksville Court clerk tells Daily RFT about the reckless endangerment charges. He was also given a $15,000 bond until he has to serve his four years. Moses was a 2003 graduate of Duchesne High School, the Post Dispatch reported. He joined the army as a nineteen-year-old student at Missouri State University. Elizabeth Moses, his younger sister, read a letter aloud at Schweitzer's sentencing. From the Leaf-Chronicle: "I could write a book of memories and stories of my brief 22 years with Nic on earth. He was truly one in a million. He had an addiction which I admired and strived to become just as infatuated with: Life. My brother was someone who truly seized the day and made the most of every moment he was given on earth," she said. "Nic will never have a family of his own, nor will my children know their Uncle Nic when that chapter of my life begins." She said her whole family felt a void in their lives from Nic's violent death. "I am forever grateful Nic had the strength to cross the street for whatever reason. I believe with his physical strength and stamina he crossed the street with the help of angels so he could see the face of (his neighbor) with his last breath rather than the face of the devil in his own home." ST. CHARLES • The family of an area Green Beret slain by a fellow soldier can’t understand how the killer could go free in as little as two years. A Circuit Court jury in Clarksville, Tenn., decided that the soldier who shot Sgt. 1st Class Frederic Nicholas “Nic” Moses five times was guilty of reckless homicide, not second-degree murder as he had been charged. The verdict means that the shooter, Benjamin K. Schweitzer, faces two to four years in prison at his sentencing hearing on Oct. 29. He could have received a maximum sentence of 25 years if found guilty of second-degree murder. At the trial, Schweitzer testified that he had taken a sedative to sleep and thought Moses was an intruder when he shot him about 10:45 a.m. in March 2012. When the jury read the verdict on Aug. 22, Paul Moses, the victim’s brother, said it felt like the room started spinning. “It was totally surreal; it was beyond comprehension,” he said. Fred Moses yelled across the courtroom at his son’s killer: “You’re going to burn in hell.” Nic Moses’ mother, Jeanie, said she was in shock for five days after the verdict and could barely function. “Then the anger started to set in,” she said. The Moses family members are not the only ones upset by the verdict. Clarksville Police Chief Alonzo Ansley says he doesn’t understand how jurors could reach the verdict they did. “Reckless homicide is doing something irresponsible and causing the death of another,” he said. “That is not putting five rounds in someone.” Schweitzer, 28, also was convicted of lesser charges related to a standoff with police after he shot Moses. One of the Clarksville police officers, James Eure, was shot in the shoulder, and another officer narrowly escaped injury. The jury found Schweitzer not guilty of two counts of attempted murder for shooting at police and instead found in favor of two misdemeanors — two counts of reckless endangerment. Schweitzer was already sentenced to time served for those offenses. “This is not justice,” Ansley said. A SOLDIER IS SHOT Moses, 26, was fatally shot on March, 15, 2012, by Schweitzer, a fellow Green Beret and medic who had been staying at the house Moses shared with several other soldiers in Clarksville. Both men were assigned to the 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) at Fort Campbell, Ky., but they had opposite deployment schedules, so they hadn’t met until recently, family members said. Moses, a communications officer, had been deployed four times — three times to Iraq and once to Afghanistan. He had been stateside since March 5 for a short training course. But family members say that Moses knew of Schweitzer, who had been disciplined for an inappropriate relationship with a soldier’s wife and for prescribing Valium to members of his troop as a sleep aid. Both offenses were noted in documents the family obtained from the Army, which also investigated the shooting. Those documents also outline that Moses had reported to the homeowner that Schweitzer was acting strangely in the days before the shooting. One day Moses said a light fixture in the kitchen had been shot out. When Moses asked Schweitzer what happened, he acted “unusually hostile,” according to the documents. Another time, Moses found Schweitzer dressed in camouflage gear, and when Moses asked what he was doing, he said he was “going shooting” but couldn’t explain where, according to the documents. Others reported Schweitzer “in a daze” and saw a used IV bag in his room. In testimony last month, Schweitzer said that he and Moses had had no problems. On the day of the shooting, Schweitzer took Ketamine, a general anesthesia and sedative, and said he was awakened by a loud noise in the kitchen. He could not explain why several of the bullets had been fired into Moses’ back, but he testified he was impaired by the drug when the police arrived. After being shot, Moses was able to run to a neighbor’s home to ask for help. Moses died a short time later. Moses’ family members say that none of the negative information about Schweitzer’s background was brought out at the trial and they believe it was left out intentionally at the Army’s request, because it would have been damaging to the 5th Group’s reputation. Army Col. Scott Brower, who was presiding commander of 5th Special Forces Group at the time of the shooting, declined an interview request by the Post-Dispatch, as did Montgomery County Assistant Prosecutor Art Bieber, who handled the case. In his closing statement during the trial, Bieber said the state had proved that Schweitzer had killed Moses knowingly and intentionally. But defense attorney Chase Smith said that was no motive or ill will had been proved and that what had happened was not murder but homicide. “Mr. Schweitzer deeply regrets his actions that day and will certainly live with those consequences for the rest of his life,” Smith said after the trial. Jeanie Moses said she believed the Army should have taken more action against Schweitzer before the shooting happened. “If the Army had done something about him, he would not have been in that house, and we would not be sitting here,” she said. Instead, Brower told the family a few months before the trial that Schweitzer had been given a less than honorable discharge, a decision that, given the jury verdict, is especially troubling to them. If Schweitzer had remained in the Army, he could have been brought up on military charges now. “I think they discharged him because they didn’t want Schweitzer to wear a uniform to the trial,” Paul Moses said. A SOLDIERS LEGACY Nic Moses was the fourth of Fred and Jeanie Moses’ five children. A brother, Daniel, is serving in the Army in Afghanistan. Family members described Nic as fun, smart, caring and generous. “He was like the light that a moth goes to — people were just drawn to him,” Jeanie Moses said. “He was an easy person to talk to.” Moses graduated in 2003 from Duchesne High School in St. Charles, where he was a good student and played football. A year later, while a student at Missouri State University, he enlisted in the Army because he wanted to do something more significant with his life, his mother said. During his career in the Army, Moses received several commendations, including the Bronze Star Medal, the Army Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster and Army Achievement Medal. Jeanie Moses said her son would have been due to get out of the Army this month, but she believes he would have re-enlisted because he had spoken to others about wanting to join Delta Force, an elite unit of Special Forces. The family says Moses had positively affected many people in his short life, as evidenced by the nearly 90 people who wrote to Montgomery County, Tenn., Judge John H. Gasaway about how the killing had affected them. They hope by bringing attention to the verdict, and what they believe was an omission of key evidence, higher courts in Tennessee will take action. “We know it’s a long shot, but we have to do it for Nic,” Jeanie Moses said. Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" Moses deployed with the Battalion Signal Detachment to Taji, Iraq from October 2007 to May 2008 in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM V. He went on to join Special Forces Operational Detachment - Alpha 5326, and deployed with them to Baqubah, Iraq from January through July 2009 in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM VI, and conducted a Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) exercise to Jordan from January through March 2010. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses then deployed to Baqubah, Iraq from August 2010 through March 2011 in support of Operation NEW DAWN. Following a short training cycle, he returned to Jordan for a second JCET exercise from October through November 2011. Most recently, Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses deployed to Baghlan-e-Jadid, Afghanistan from January through February 2012 in support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM XVIII. Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" Moses was born in St Louis County, MO on May 6, 1985 and moved to St Charles County, MO at the age of 5. He attended all Catholic schools, St Francis of Assisi and St Peter Catholic grade schools and graduated from Duchesne High School in 2003. After a brief stint at Missouri State University, he decided to do something more with his life and for his country and enlisted in the United States Army on 01 June 2004 as an 18X. He attended Basic Training and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Benning, Georgia. Upon completion of the Special Forces Qualification Course in 2006, he was assigned to 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) at Fort Campbell, Kentucky as a Special Forces Communications Sergeant. He deployed with the Battalion Signal Detachment to Taji, Iraq from October 2007 to May 2008 in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM V. He went on to join Special Forces Operational Detachment - Alpha 5326, and deployed with them to Baqubah, Iraq from January through July 2009 in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM VI, and conducted a Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) exercise to Jordan from January through March 2010. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses then deployed to Baqubah, Iraq from August 2010 through March 2011 in support of Operation NEW DAWN. Following a short training cycle, he returned to Jordan for a second JCET exercise from October through November 2011. Most recently, Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses deployed to Baghlan-e-Jadid, Afghanistan from January through February 2012 in support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM XVIII. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses' military education includes Airborne School, Special Forces Assessment and Selection, Survival, Escape, Resistance and Evasion Course, Special Forces Qualification Course, Ranger School, Jumpmaster School, Basic Military Mountaineering Course, and the Advanced Special Operations Techniques Course. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses' awards and decorations include the Bronze Star Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, Meritorious Service Medal, Army Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, and Army Achievement Medal. His decorations include the Special Forces Tab, Ranger Tab, Combat Infantryman Badge, and Parachutist Badge. SFC Frederic Nicholas "Nic" Moses was murdered (homicide) by Benjamin Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer on March 15th, 2012 in Clarksville TN. The Army today provided more details on the soldier killed Thursday in Clarksville, and on the suspected assailant, also a soldier. The victim, Sgt. 1st Class Frederic N. Moses, 26, and the suspect, Sgt. Benjamin Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer, were both assigned to 5th Special Forces Group at Fort Campbell, according to a news release from Army Special Forces. Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer was charged today by Tennessee Bureau of Investigation with criminal homicide. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses was born in St. Charles, Mo., and joined the Army in 2004 with a Special Forces enlistment option. After completing Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training he attended and graduated from the Special Forces Qualification Course. He was assigned to 5th SFG (A) in November 2006, serving as a communications sergeant. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses completed four combat deployments: three to Iraq and one to Afghanistan. He returned from his most recent combat tour supporting Operation Enduring Freedom in February 2012. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses' awards include the Bronze Star Medal, Army Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, and Army Achievement Medal. Other decorations include the Special Forces Tab, Ranger Tab, Combat Infantry Badge, and the Parachutist Badge. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses is survived by his parents, two sisters, and two brothers. Green Beret murdered by fellow Green Beret A U.S. Special Forces soldier from St. Charles County was shot and killed by another member of his unit while on leave in Clarksville, Tennessee. NewsChannel 5 learned the solider was planning to come home this weekend to surprise his mom. This all happened not far from Fort Campbell, Kentucky where Sergeant First Class Frederic "Nic" Moses was based. Police in Tennessee say an officer was shot, and a stand-off also resulted soon after the St. Charles soldier was killed. He had eight years of military experience under his belt- a Green Beret. He served three tours in Iraq, and was in the middle of a tour to Afghanistan. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses had returned back to the states for special training, when police say he was gunned down by a fellow soldier, Thursday. It happened in a Clarksville, Tennessee neighborhood. Police say the 26 year- old was found dead on a neighbor's front porch, where he had gone for help. "We do not know right now the circumstances that actually led up to the shooting and the murder inside the home. We still haven't established a motive for that," said Kristen Helm, spokesperson for the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations. Police in Tennesse say the shooter, Benjamin Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer, barricaded himself in this home where he and Moses had been staying, after the shooting. Once officers made their way inside, they say Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer ambushed them, shooting one officer in the arm. Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer is now being held, without bond, on murder charges. Investigators say Schewitzer and Moses were a part of the same unit, based in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. Sunday, NewsChannel 5 talked to Jeanie Moses, the mother of the Nic Moses. She tells us, Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses returned home from Afghanistan about a week before Thursday's shooting. She would later find out, Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses had plans to come home this weekend, for a surprise visit. Jeanie Moses tells NewsChannel 5, "Nic" Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses was preparing to report to Fort Bragg for three weeks of special training. He was then to return to Afghanistan to finish out the rest of the year. Family members say the last time they heard from Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses, he was texting with his sister, just 10 minutes before the shooting, and didn't indicate that anything was wrong. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses was a 2003 graduate of Duchense High School. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Baue, and are still pending. The Tennessee Burearu of Investigations is now handling this case. Hundreds gathered this morning at St. Peter Catholic Church to honor a fallen soldier from St. Charles. Green Berets from the 5th Special Forces Group carried the casket of their comrade, Sgt. 1st Class Frederic "Nic" Moses, up the steps and into the church. Moses, 26, was shot and killed March 15 by his roommate and fellow Green Beret inside a house they shared in Clarksville, Tenn. Authorities do not know what led up to the shooting. During his homily, Monsignor Raymond Hampe reminded those gathered to think of stories of resurrection and eternal life. "Last Thursday morning, Nic heard his name called with so much love he could hardly stand it," Hampe said. "And there's Jesus standing there, with his arms open. He simply says, 'Come on, Nic. Let's go home.'" Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses, a 2003 graduate of Duchesne High School in St. Charles, joined the army the following year. In addition to his parents, Fred and Jeanie Moses of St. Charles, Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses is survived by two sisters, two brothers, and a large extended family.A soldier suspected of shooting a roommate to death Thursday morning - then turning the gun on Clarksville Police - is a 26-year-old 5th Special Forces Group soldier who neighbors say was depressed over a recent demotion. The victim, Sgt. 1st Class Frederic N. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses, also 26, and the suspect, Sgt. Benjamin Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer, were both assigned to 5th Group at Fort Campbell, according to a news release from Army Special Forces Command. The two were among several soldiers living as roommates at 3388 Quicksilver Court, said Dana Hayes, who lives across the street. She said she knew both Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer and Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses. "Frederic (Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses) had just got back from deployment," Hayes said. "He was a very nice guy. When we moved here, he helped us." Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer may have been staying in the house temporarily, she said. He had stayed in her family's home briefly and stayed with other friends in the close-knit North Clarksville community. Hayes said that despite Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer's sometimes "intense" personality, she didn't believe he had a motive to kill Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses. "I just think (Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses) was at the wrong place at the wrong time." she said. "Benjamin had been recently demoted, and he was depressed. "I feel bad for both families. You can't imagine getting that phone call that your child is dead. I'm sad no one picked up on it." Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer was charged Friday by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation with criminal homicide. According to a TBI warrant obtained by The Leaf-Chronicle, at 10:45 a.m. Thursday, a woman at 3389 Quicksilver Court called 911 and said a man covered in blood was trying to get in her door. When Clarksville Police arrived, Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses was lying on the front porch, unresponsive. He was later declared dead by Montgomery County Coroner Rita Peters from a gunshot wound, said the warrant, signed by TBI Special Agent Haidy Grigsby. Four Clarksville Police officers - Sgt. Andy Hagewood, Officer James Eure, Officer Shawn Brown and Officer Travis Baker - followed a trail of blood from Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses to 3388 Quicksilver Court, two doors down. An officer noticed blood stains on the front door and on a glass screen door, the warrant said. After knocking and announcing they were entering, the officers went in the house and to a room that was locked shut. The four officers forced entry and were met with gunfire by Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer, the warrant said. Officer Eure was shot in the upper arm. When police retreated, Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer barricaded himself in the room. Eure and Officer Brown saw Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer throw a large-caliber handgun into the hallway before locking himself back in the room, the warrant said. TBI's Violent Crime Response Team later recovered a Glock . 45-caliber handgun in that hallway, the warrant said. The CPD Tactical Team surrounded the house, and about two hours later the officers were evacuated from a back window using a ladder. At 2:15 p.m., about three hours after the incident began, Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer surrendered. He was taken by ambulance to an area hospital and treated overnight for bullet wounds from law enforcement gunfire, according to a news release from Kristin Helm, TBI spokeswoman. Police have not yet released how Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer was shot. TBI is investigating the officer-involved shooting portion of the incident and will turn the case file over to the District Attorney General for review. It is possible that Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer will face additional charges, Helm said. Clarksville Police Chief Al Ansley said as part of standard procedure, Eure has been placed on administrative leave with pay, and one of the other officers has also been placed on administrative leave as part of the shooting investigation. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses was born in St. Charles, Mo., and joined the Army in 2004 with a Special Forces enlistment option, according to the Army news release. After completing Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training, he attended and graduated from the Special Forces Qualification Course. He was assigned to 5th Group (A) in November 2006, serving as a communications sergeant. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses completed four combat deployments: three to Iraq and one to Afghanistan. He returned in February from his most recent combat tour supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses' awards include the Bronze Star Medal, Army Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, and Army Achievement Medal. Other decorations include the Special Forces Tab, Ranger Tab, Combat Infantry Badge, and the Parachutist Badge. Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses is survived by his parents, two sisters and two brothers. Benjamin Kyle Schweitzer, who gave 3388 Quicksilver as his address, is being held in Montgomery County Jail with no bond. He is scheduled to have a preliminary hearing March 26 at 1:30 p.m. Remnants of the crime scene were still visible Friday. Several windows were shattered in the front of the home where the Clarksville Police Tactical Team had shot gas canisters through the windows."This neighborhood is so quiet," Hayes said. "It's a nice neighborhood. All this was a little too close to home." She said the situation may have appeared to be an attempted break-in, but after finding out it was Green Beret Sergeant First Class Frederic Nicholas "Nic" SFC Moses who was injured, she knew he was seeking help. "He was not trying to burglarize a house, he was trying to live. He was trying to find someone to help," she said. "When my neighbor called 911, she was scared. She didn't know what was going on." That such violence could erupt from two people she knew was a shock for Hayes. "You never know," she said. "You think you know someone, and it turns out you don't. It's frightening."

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