Varnado Simpson

Private First Class Varnado Simpson (October 7, 1948 - May 4, 1997) was an American soldier of the US Army who participated in the My Lai Massacre, murdering, torturing and mutilating Vietnamese villagers. He claimed to be wracked with remorse after the killings, eventually committing suicide nearly 30 years later.

Simpson joined the U.S. Army in 1967, at the age of 18, and the following year was posted to South Vietnam. He was assigned to Second Platoon, Charlie Company, under the command of Captain Ernest Medina, and participated in the massacre at the village of My Lai, where he reportedly killed at least eight unarmed villagers, including a mother and her baby (I shot them, the lady and the little boy. He was about two years old.). His official statement on the event was succinct: I killed about eight people that day. I shot a couple of old men who were running away. I also shot some women and children. I would shoot them as they ran out of huts or tried to hide.

In 1977, Simpson's 10-year-old son was accidentally killed by a random shot fired by some neighborhood teenagers. Simpson recalled the day later by stating He died in my arms. And when I looked at him, his face was like the same face of the child that I had killed. And I said: This is the punishment for killing the people that I killed. Simpson's daughter died of meningitis a few years before he died.

In 1982, he was admitted to a Veterans Affairs hospital in Jackson, Mississippi, where he was diagnosed with chronic and severe Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder after recounting his actions in the village, as well as his recurring fears that the dead villagers would come back for vengeance upon him.

In 1989, in an interview for the British documentary "Four Hours in My Lai", Simpson claimed to have killed about 25 people and added scalping and bodily mutilation to his description of events. The baby’s face was half gone, my mind just went…and I just started killing. Old men, women, children, water buffaloes, everything… I just killed… That day in My Lai, I was personally responsible for killing about 25 people. Personally. Men, women. From shooting them, to cutting their throats, scalping them, to...cutting off their hands and cutting out their tongues. I did it., he said. At this point he was being heavily medicated for psychological disorders, and it is unclear which memories of the events are more accurate.

For years Simpson had lived with all his doors and windows locked and shuttered. After three unsuccessful attempts, he committed suicide in his home on Sunday, May 4, 1997, at the age of 48, with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

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