US Staff Sergeant Robert Bales has gaps in his memory of the night he's accused of killing 16 Afghan villagers, his lawyer says. "He has an early memory of that evening, and he has a later memory, but he doesn't have memory of the evening in between," John Henry Browne told CBS after a long meeting with his client. Bales told Browne he wasn't drunk that night, but "had a couple sips of something." Asked by AP whether Bales could remember the shooting spree, Browne said: "No," but added: "I haven't gotten that far with him yet."
More details have emerged about Bales' pre-military life, the Washington Post finds. Before Bales joined the Army in 2001, he worked as a financial advisor and was accused of stealing money from a client, records reveal. An arbitration panel found that Bales had "engaged in fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, unauthorized trading and unsuitable investments," and ordered him and his employer to pay $1.4 million in compensation and punitive damages. The client, a retired engineer, says he never received a penny of the award. (More Robert Bales stories.)