ALASKA'S NEWSPAPER

| Updated: 12:01 AM

Elizabeth OuYang, president of the New York chapter of the Organization of Chinese Americans, speaks while flanked by the father of Pvt. Danny Chen, Yan Tao Chen, left, and his mother Su Zhen Chen, right, during a press conference in New York, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Chen's parents provided an update on the investigation into the death of their son, based at Ft. Wainwright, who committed suicide after allegedly being mistreated by his comrades in Afghanistan.

Bebeto Matthews / Associated Press

Elizabeth OuYang, president of the New York chapter of the Organization of Chinese Americans, speaks while flanked by the father of Pvt. Danny Chen, Yan Tao Chen, left, and his mother Su Zhen Chen, right, during a press conference in New York, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Chen's parents provided an update on the investigation into the death of their son, based at Ft. Wainwright, who committed suicide after allegedly being mistreated by his comrades in Afghanistan.

PHOTO GALLERY

STOMP

Photo by JR AnchetaSoldiers from Soldiers of the 1st Battalion 5th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division march in downtown Fairbanks during S.T.O.M.P. The 1/25 SBCT soldiers returned this spring from a yearlong deployment in Southern Afghanistan. About 5,000 military personnel from Ft. Wainwright and Eielson Air Force base and other veterans marched during the parade.

Hundreds of community members lined the streets in Fairbanks honoring veterans and military personnel Saturday, May 12, 2012 during the Salute to Our Military Parade. About 5,000 military personnel from Ft. Wainwright and Eielson Air Force base and other veterans marched during the parade.

Troops Home from Afghanistan

145 soldiers from the 164th Military Police Company, 793rd Military Police Battalion, 2nd Engineer Brigade returned to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson from a 12 month deployment in Afghanistan on Saturday, March 24, 2012. The soldiers were reunited with family and friends after a brief ceremony at the Buckner Physical Fitness Center.

145 Military Police return from a 12 months in Afghanistan.

SOLDIER PROFILES

Alaska's Fallen Soldiers

Running list of profiles of Alaskan, or Alaska-based, soldiers who have died since 2003.

Abuse from comrades led to soldier's suicide, family claims

NEW YORK -- An Alaska-based teenage Army private who committed suicide just weeks after getting to Afghanistan had been mistreated by comrades on an almost daily basis, his family and community representatives said investigators told them.

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Private Danny Chen

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Daniel Chen's parents and other members of Manhattan's Chinese community held a news conference Thursday to disclose what they had learned from Army investigators at a meeting the day before.

"Almost immediately after he arrived, Danny was required to do exercises which quickly within a few days crossed into abuse," said Elizabeth OuYang, a community activist representing his parents.

The family was briefed on the results of Regional Command South's administrative investigation into Chen's death, Army spokesman George Wright said. A criminal investigation is ongoing.

The Army did not disclose details of what its investigators told the family.

OuYang said investigators had told the family that the 19-year-old Chen, part of the Fort Wainwright based Stryker bridge deployed to Afghanistan, was subjected to excessive sit-ups, push-ups, runs and sprints carrying sandbags, among other things, and that rocks were thrown at him to simulate artillery. She said the investigators reported he also was called racial slurs and was forced to work additional details.

When the soldiers were putting up a tent, Chen was forced to wear a construction hat and give instructions in Chinese, even though none of the other soldiers spoke the language, she said investigators told his relatives.

On Oct. 3, Chen was found dead in a guardhouse in Afghanistan with what the Army said apparently was a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He had arrived in Afghanistan in August.

On the day of Chen's death, OuYang said investigators told the family, he had reported to the guard tower without his helmet or adequate water. She said he was forced to crawl 100 meters on gravel with his equipment on as his comrades threw rocks at him.

Eight soldiers are facing charges ranging from dereliction of duty to involuntary manslaughter in connection to Chen's death.

The eight soldiers are part of the infantry regiment based in Fort Wainright, Alaska. They are from Maryland; Port Arthur, Texas; Aberdeen, S.D.; Youngstown, Ohio; Brooklyn, Iowa; Hendersonville, Tenn.; Greenville, Pa.; and Fowler, Ind.

The soldiers are still in Afghanistan but have been relieved of their duties and confined to a different base, the military said. The next step is a hearing to determine if there is enough evidence for a court martial. The proceedings are expected to be held in Afghanistan.

Chen's family and the community members are calling for the hearings to be held in the United States, saying that to do otherwise would be unfair.

"We must have access to these proceedings," OuYang said. "We must be able to see that justice can be served."

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