A former Army sergeant admitted to the brutal 2020 stabbing of a fellow soldier in his Georgia barracks, a killing federal prosecutors say was retaliation "in cold blood" for the soldier reporting marijuana use.
Under the plea agreement, he faces a mandatory minimum sentence of life in federal prison, the Department of Justice said in a news release on Thursday.
"The pair discussed beating Hawk up, damaging his car, or breaking things in Hawk’s barracks room," the plea agreement says.
The following day, around 12:20 a.m., Booker parked his vehicle outside of a gate on the base and "unlawfully" entered before walking to Hawk's barracks room.
The fight made so much noise that Brown, in a room below, could hear furniture moving, the plea agreement states.