The widow of the Navy
SEAL depicted in the Oscar-nominated film "American Sniper" clutched
military dog tags as she told jurors about her final moments with her husband,
just hours before he and a friend were slain at a Texas gun range.
Taya
Kyle was the first prosecution witness called Wednesday in the murder trial of
the ex-Marine accused of fatally shooting Chris Kyle and his friend Chad
Littlefield two years ago. The trial in the small town of Stephenville, located
about 30 miles from the rural luxury resort where the men were killed, has
attracted national attention with the recent release of the blockbuster movie
based on the memoir of the sniper who served four tours in Iraq.
Defense attorneys are seeking an insanity
defense for Eddie Ray Routh, 27, who faces life in prison without parole if
convicted of capital murder. Kyle had taken the troubled Marine to the shooting
range after Routh's mother asked Kyle if he could help him.
Taya
Kyle paused and then her voice broke when a prosecutor asked her to give jurors
the name of the man she'd married. But her testimony was conversational and
compelling and she often looked straight at jurors as she talked about him,
smiling when she said he had attended Tarleton State University in Stephenville
before leaving to ride broncos in the rodeo and later joining the Navy.
"I'm
not nervous, just emotional," she told the prosecutor.
She
told jurors that as her husband left to go to the shooting range on Feb. 2,
2013, "we just said we loved each other and gave each other a hug and
kiss, like we always did."
The
day started like any typical Saturday for the Kyles. As parents of an
8-year-old boy and 6-year-old girl, they had spent their morning cheering at
youth sporting events and chatting with friends. Taya Kyle had plans that
afternoon to take their daughter to a Build-A-Bear Workshop.
Taya
Kyle said she'd called her husband midafternoon — around the time he arrived at
Rough Creek Lodge and Resort — and noticed he was unusually terse. Instead of
his usual "hello babe," he gave a quick "hello." He said it
would be fine to have dinner with friends. Then she asked if he was OK. He just
said "yep."
"It
was short, like: 'I wish I could say more,'" she said.
During
opening statements, a defense attorney revealed a text message exchange between
Chris Kyle and Littlefield as they drove to the lodge with Routh, whom Kyle had
picked up at his house.
Kyle
texted Littlefield: "This dude is straight-up nuts."
"He's
(sitting) right behind me, watch my six," Littlefield texted back, using a
military term for watching one's back.
As
dinnertime approached, she became concerned. Littlefield's wife called her,
also worried. Taya Kyle's alarm grew when she texted her husband: "Are you
OK? I'm getting worried." There was no reply.
The
bodies of Littlefield and Kyle were found at the shooting range at about 5 p.m.
Both were shot multiple times.
Erath
County District Attorney Alan Nash described Routh as "a troubled young
man" who on the morning of the killings numbed himself with marijuana and
whiskey. He said a history of mental illness should not absolve Routh in the
deaths.
"The
evidence will show that mental illnesses, even the ones that this defendant may
or may not have, don't deprive people from being good citizens, to know right
from wrong," Nash said.
Tim
Moore, an attorney for Routh, said Kyle and Littlefield's text exchange shows
how Routh was spiraling out of control. He told jurors that Routh was suffering
from severe mental strain that day and thought he needed to kill the two or
they would turn on him.
Routh
was a small arms technician who served in Iraq and was deployed to
earthquake-ravaged Haiti before leaving the Marines in 2010. Authorities say
that after the shootings, Routh drove to his sister's house in Kyle's truck,
admitted to the killings and told his sister "people were sucking his
soul."
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