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19 October 2006. Sniper kill videos from January 2006, grim, uncut, not like those sanitized for home viewing on CNN:

BSVHR                 Hi-Rez Baghdad Sniper Video (67MB)               January 12, 2006
BSV                   Baghdad Sniper Video (24MB)                      January 11, 2006

15 January 2006

Part 1: http://cryptome.info/sk/sniper-kills.htm


Captions by Associated Press
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A U.S. Army soldier uses a dummy to draw a sniper into view in Najaf, Iraq, Friday, Aug. 20, 2004. Later on Friday, militiamen loyal to rebel Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr removed their weapons from the revered Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf as part of an effort to end 2-week-old uprising centered on the holy site. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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A U.S. Army sniper takes a position behind a wall in central Najaf, Iraq, Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2004, a few hundred yards from the Shrine of Imam Ali. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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An American soldier sits at a sniper position in an area where Mahdi soldiers loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr clash with U.S. and Iraqi forces in the besieged city of Najaf, Iraq Friday Aug. 20, 2004. Militiamen loyal to rebel Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr on Friday removed their weapons from the revered Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf as part of an effort to end 2-week-old uprising centered on the holy site. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

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A U.S. Army sniper, no name given, lays low in a fortified position during an attack by numerous snipers in Najaf, Iraq, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2004. Sporadic, heavy fighting continues Thursday. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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A U.S. special operations sniper locks on a target near the cemetery in Najaf, Iraq, Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2004. Sporadic but heavy fighting continued Wednesday. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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U.S. Army soldiers raid buildings while under sniper fire in Najaf, Iraq, Friday, Aug. 20, 2004. Later on Friday, militiamen loyal to rebel Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr removed their weapons from the revered Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf as part of an effort to end 2-week-old uprising centered on the holy site. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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U.S. Army 2nd Lt. Leonard Cowherd of Culpeper, Va., shown in an undated photo, was fatally shot by an Iraqi sniper during a raid of a building holding insurgents Sunday, May 16, 2004, in Karbala. Cowherd was a platoon commander with the 1st Brigade 1st Armor Division. A 2003 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, Cowherd is the first Culpeper casualty of the Iraq war. (AP Photo/Family Photo via The Star-Exponent)

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At her home in Portsmouth, Va., Wednesday, May 12, 2004, Rosemerry Tuazon talks about her son, Army Pfc. Andrew L. Tuazon, 21, who was killed by a sniper in Mosul, Iraq, Monday. (AP Photo/The Virginian-Pilot, Stephen M. Katz)

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Army Spc. Philip I. Spakosky, 25, of Pemberton Township, N.J., shown in this undated family photo was struck by a sniper's bullet May 13, 2004, during fighting in Karbala, the site of an uprising by a Shiite militia, and died the next day. He was a tank crewman in the 1st Armored Division. (AP Photo/Spakosky Family via Burlington County Times)

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Marine Pfc. Robert Thompson, 19, of Helena, Mont., right, and Pfc. Ryan Topete, 20, of Sioux City, Iowa, look over a high powered sniper rifle that Marines found in the car of a man that was passing by their position in northwest Fallujah on Wednesday, April 14, 2004. The man was detained for questioning. (AP Photo/North County Times, Hayne Palmour IV)

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Todd Van Leuven, left, is consoled following the funeral for his son Lance Cpl. Gary Frances Van Leuven, 20, of Klamath Falls, in Coos Bay, Ore., Wednesday, April 28, 2004. Leuven was shot a sniper in Iraq on April 17. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

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A US army sniper takes up position at a traffic check point near Najaf, Iraq, Friday April 16, 2004. Snipers are in great demand in Iraq as they are ideally able to isolate and knock out combatants without harming civilians among which insurgents operate or use as human shields. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das)

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A man sits next to what he said was the blood of his brother who alleged was shot by a Marine sniper, while in the driveway where the family put the fatally wounded man in a car headed for the hospital during a battalion sized raid by the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment in a section of Fallujah, Iraq, on Friday, March 26, 2004. The man was reported to be on a rooftop staring at Marines during their operation while on a cell phone when he was shot by the sniper. (AP Photo/North County Times, HaynePalmour IV)

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U.S. Marines from Weapons Company of the 1st Battalion 5th Regiment run to elude sniper fire in Fallujah, Iraq, Thursday, April 15, 2004. Marines have clashed with insurgents repeatedly during the last week of ceasefire in the city.(AP Photo/John Moore)

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A picture of Sgt. Roger Dale Rowe sits in front of a floral arrangement that reads "Dad our hero" during his funeral service Friday, July 18, 2003, in Bon Aqua, Tenn. Rowe, a Tennessee Army National Guardsman, was killed by a sniper July 9, as he drove a tanker fuel truck in Iraq. He died five days before his 55th birthday, making him the oldest American casualty since the start of the war in Iraq. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

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Sgt. Jeffery Mann, center, of the U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division 1-22 Infantry regiment, jokes with Iraqi police officers in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, 193 km (120 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003. The Army provided five Russian made sniper rifles to the Iraqi police to help them fight Saddam's loyalists. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)

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Iraqi policemen look at the body of a suspected gun dealer who was killed by U.S. soldiers at a market place in the city of Tikrit, Iraq, Friday Aug. 8, 2003. U.S. snipers killed two men and wounded two others who were allegedly selling weapons in a market in the center of Tikrit. U.S. forces positioned snipers around the market after hearing that weapons and ammunition was sold at the market place. According to soldiers the man was shot as he tried to flee with an AK-47 assault rifle. (AP Photo/Murad Sezer)

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U.S. Army Soldiers search for snipers during patrols Sunday, July 6, 2003, in Baghdad, Iraq. U.S. troops have come under near daily attacks from increasingly bold insurgents. At least 27 U.S. troops have been killed in hostile fire since major combat was officially declared over on May 1. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

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T.J. Kewatt, left, touches the casket of his friend and cousin, Pfc. Edward James Herrgott, as he and others grieved at burial services in Shakopee, Minn., Tuesday, July 15. 2003. Herrgott, 20, was the first Minnesotan killed in the war in Iraq, shot by a sniper while guarding the National Museum in Baghdad, July 3. Kewatt, from Shakopee, was also serving with the Army in Iraq when his cousin was killed and accompanied Herrgott's body home. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

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A U.S. Army soldier with the 1st Armored Division sits atop his M-109 self-propelled artillery gun as he guards the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, July 4, 2003. Thursday evening, a sniper shot and killed a U.S. soldier manning the gunner's hatch of a Bradley fighting vehicle outside the national museum. Hours before the attack, the national museum displayed several artifacts that were looted after the fall of Baghdad and later recovered. (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel)

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A U.S. military police officer keeps alert while patrolling the streets of Baghdad at night on Tuesday, June 17, 2003. A U.S. soldier was killed by a sniper while patrolling Baghdad late Monday. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

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An 82nd Airborned Division paratrooper is coached while firing a Romanian copy of the famous Russian Dragonov sniper rifle by an infantryman from the Romanian Army's 812th Infantry Battalion during a live fire on Wednesday June 4, 2003 at Tarknak Farms, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/U.S. Army, Cpl. Keith A. Kluwe, HO)

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Elisha Pahnke, widow of Army Pvt. Shawn Pahnke, kisses the casket of her husband Thursday, June 26, 2003 at his funeral in Manhattan, Ill. Shawn Pahnke was killed by a sniper while on patrol June 17 in Baghdad, Iraq. (AP Photo, Oscar Salinas/The Daily Journal)

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Tracy Conley, center, grieves for her brother-in-law, U.S. Army Pfc. Marlin Rockhold, during a memorial service Wednesday, May 28, 2003, at Ft. Stewart, Ga. Rockhold was killed by a sniper May 8 while directing traffic on a bridge in Baghdad a week after President Bush declared an end to the fighting in Iraq. Rockhold was member of the Army's 3rd Infantry Division which is based at Ft. Stewart. (AP Photo/Stephen Morton)

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U.S soldiers sit on top of school desks at a primary school in Fallujah, Iraq manning sniper positions at the windows Tuesday April 29, 2003. U.S. soldiers opened fire fired on anti-American protesters Monday night after some Iraqi crowd members shot at the troops, a U.S. officer said Tuesday. A local hospital director said 13 Iraqis were killed and 75 injured. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

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Carmen Garza wipes away tears as stands with family members Thursday morning, April 10, 2003, at the San Benito High School in San Benito, Texas, during an early morning memorial service honoring her grandson, Marine Pfc. Juan G. Garza Jr. Residents joined students and faculty at the high school Thursday to pay tribute to the fallen Marine, who was shot in the chest by a sniper on Tuesday, April 8, as he patrolled an airport in Baghdad, Iraq. (AP Photo/The Valley Morning Star, Ric Vasquez)

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A U.S. Army sniper takes aim on irregular Iraqi forces firing upon American troops from behind a mosque in Baghdad Wednesday, April 9, 2003.(AP Photo/John Moore)

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U.S. Marine snipers of Task Force Tarawa guard the streets from the roof of a hotel where U.S. Marines and local leaders were meeting for the first time Saturday, April 19, 2003, in Kut, 160 kms, 100 miles, south of Baghdad. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

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U.S. Marines of the 3rd Battalion, 4th Regiment, take position after they were taking fire from an Iraqi sniper on the main road linking to Baghdad , about a half mile (10 km) from the outskirts of the Iraqi capital, Saturday, April 5, 2003. (AP Photo/Laurent Rebours)

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Lance Sgt Chris Briggs, left, and Guardsman Warren Bradford, both serving as snipers with Support Company attached to Number 1 Company 1st Battalion The Irish Guards, take up positions Thursday April 3, 2002, to provide cover for Royal Engineers trying to extingush an oil well fire. The action came during a dawn raid by the Irish Guards on a university factory complex situated on the outskirts of Basra. British forces came under fire from small arms and mortars, and Lynx helicopter was fired at with a SAM missile. (AP Photo/Giles Penfound,Pool)

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A U.S. Army sniper takes aim on targets in a residential area near the Euphrates River in Al Hindiyah Monday, March 31, 2003. The army's Task Force 4-64, part of the 3rd Infantry Division, seized the road leading over the river as part of its campaign to move north towards Baghdad. (AP Photo/John Moore)

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Leslie Sanders, mother of Army Spc. Greg Sanders, 19, killed in an apparent suprise attack in Iraq, reads a letter she wrote for reporters as she stands with her daughter, Clare, 10, in front of their home in Hobart, Ind., Tuesday, April 1, 2003. In the foreground is a makeshift memorial that includes contributions from relatives, friends and neighbors. Military authorities told Sanders' family that Greg was killed Monday in a sniper shooting, according to a family spokesman. (AP Photo/The Star, Mpozi Mshale Tolbert)

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An unidentified U.S. marine pours water over the area of a marine sniper position, Monday March 24, 2003, as he prepares for another shot at Iraq forces held up in a disused building just outside the port of Um Qsar in southern Iraq. The water prevents the sand from rising up from the recoil of the weapon. (AP Photo/Tam McDonald, Ministry of Defense, HO).

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U.S. Marine Staff Sgt John Coughlin from Waltham, Ma, of the 3rd batallion 4th regiment, aims his sniper rifle as an Iraqi farmer looks on, during a patrol alongside the main road used by the U.S.-led coalition on their way towards Baghdad, in central Iraq, Wednesday, March 26, 2003. (AP Photo/Laurent Rebours)

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A Canadian sniper from the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry tests his equipment in full camouflage as he looks through a C-3 rifle at the air base in Kandahar, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2002. The precision marksmen are trained in the arts of camouflage and moving undetected in enemy territory. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)

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Master Cpl. Arron Perry, a Canadian sniper who was on the front lines of fighting the war of terrorism in Afghanistan, is shown examining the remains of a dead al-Qaida fighter in this photo taken March 3 , 2002 at The Whales Back in Eastern Afghanistan. An internal Canadian Forces probe was investigating allegations that Perry had desecrated the corpses of two al-Qaida fighters. The investigation is over and military officials have said none of the allegations have been proved. Perry has vehemently denied he did anything to the bodies. (AP Photo/Canadian Press, Stephen Thorne) EDS NOTE: THE EVENT PICTURED IS NOT THE ONE BEING INVESTIGATED

Related
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Chinese police officer giving members of the public a touch of a sniper rifle on the streets of Beijing, China, Tuesday, Oct 25, 2005. Chinese authorities are keen to promote relationship with the public to counterbalance general perception of corruption and inefficiency of the police force. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

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Radiance Technologies engineers Frederick Gant, left, and Tim Patterson operate the WeaponWatch system mounted on the front and rear of a Humvee, from a tablet PC, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2005, in Huntsville, Ala. Perhaps the most lethal combat method Iraqi insurgents have against American troops is the sneak attack by a sniper. So Radiance Technologies, an Alabama company, set out to invent a device that neutralizes that advantage. (AP Photo/Patricia Miklik Doyle)

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Coral Gables Police officer Eduardo Orbe checks out a Sig Sauer rifle Monday, Sept. 26, 2005, at the annual conference of the International Association of Chiefs of Police in Miami Beach, Fla. More than 14,000 law enforcement professionals were expected to attend the event, which ends Wednesday. The IACP is the world's oldest and largest non-profit membership organization of police executives, with more than 19,000 members in more than 100 different countries. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)

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A Russian Interior Ministry sniper, center, and two soldiers control the perimeter, in Nalchik, southern Russia , Friday, Oct. 14, 2005. Security forces on Friday freed seven hostages who had been held by alleged Islamic extremists in a police station and a store, trying to snuff out the last resistance by rebels who launched simultaneous attacks on police and government buildings across this turbulent southern Russian town a day earlier. Chechen rebels claimed responsibility for the offensive in Nalchik. (AP Photo/ Misha Japaridze)

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San Jose (Calif.) SWAT officers Julio Morales, right, and spotter Steven Payne participate in the sniper course with a moving target during the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department 15th Annual Best In The West S.W.A.T. Competition on Friday, Sept. 23, 2005, in San Jose, Calif. The two-day event, attracting top S.W.A.T. teams from California, Washington, and Nevada were held at the Sheriff's Range. (AP/ Palo Alto Daily News, Tony Avelar)

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A German police sniper guards a television studio in Berlin Adlershof, Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005 for the upcoming television debate of Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and his conservative challenger Angela Merkel . Schroeder and Merkel square off Sunday in a live televised debate, a crucial encounter that gives both candidates a chance to impress undecided voters two weeks before Germany's Sept. 18 election. (AP Photo/Jockel Finck)

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Snipers of Kyrgyz special forces attend joint anti-terrorist exercises of Russia and some Central Asian nations, former Soviet republics, in northern Kyrgyzstan, Friday, Aug. 6, 2004. On Wednesday December 7, 2005 the United nations Development Program urged the Central Asian governments to join key international anti-terrorism treaties and modernize border management for effective control of drug flows and cross-border criminal activities. (AP Photo)

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A Kyrgyz sniper armed with Russian made VSS Vintorez silenced sniper rifle looks on during military exercises in northern Kyrgyzstan, Friday, Aug. 6, 2004. Russian jets and helicopters struck mountainside targets Friday in northern Kyrgyzstan as elite soldiers stormed a village to practice rooting out militants in Central Asia's largest military exercises since the Soviet collapse. (AP Photo)

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A police sniper lines up his weapon as he takes up position in the Notting Hill district of London Friday July 29, 2005, near where police arrested three men after raiding two residences in the area, and said they were connected to the failed July 21 attacks on London's transport network.(AP Photo/Robert Jackson) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT **

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A member of the U.S. Secret Service Counter-Snipers squad makes his way to the roof of RFK Stadium to get into position for opening day ceremonies for tonight's game between the Washington Nationals and the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks at RFK Stadium Thursday, April 14, 2005 in Washington. President Bush is throwing out the first pitch at the first regular-season baseball game in the nation's capital in 34 years. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

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Police snipers aim their weapons from a rooftop on Mesa Avenue in Las Cruces, N.M., Monday, Feb. 28, 2005, during a search for an armed man who led police on a pursuit in southern New Mexico and then exchanged shots with officers. The armed suspect fled into a residential neighborhood, where he was later shot and killed by police. (AP Photo/Las Cruces Sun-News, Norm Dettlaff)

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Names of the 10 people killed in the Washington area sniper shootings are etched into a stone in the Montgomery County arboretum in Wheaton, Md., Thursday, Sept. 23, 2004. The section of the arboretum will get a new name _ Reflection Terrace in memorial for the 10 people killed in the Washington area sniper shootings in 2002. The memorial was officially dedicated Friday, Oct. 1, 2004. (AP Photo/Chris Gardner)

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Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-NY, shows the 50 caliber anti-armor sniper rifle at a news conference in New York, Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2004. Maloney called for a federal ban on the 50 cal. rifles. They can be ordered over the telephone and Bin Laden has bought 25 of the Barrett 50 cal. sniper rifles in the late 1980s. (AP Photo/Ed Bailey)

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A police sniper in plain clothes, left, about to shoot a Chinese man holding a girl hostage in Anhui, Eastern China, Monday, June 21, 2004. The hostage taker held the 11-year-old girl in an attempt to force the mass media to report on his problems. The girl was rescued after the sniper shot the man to death. (AP Photo)