Kill Team (A Firsthand Account of the Maywand District Murders and the Subsequent Military Investigation and Trials)
List Price:
$35.00
| Expected release date is Oct 28th 2026 |
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Product Details
Author:
Calvin R. Gibbs
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
392
Publisher:
Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. (October 28, 2026)
Release Date:
October 28, 2026
Language:
English
Audience:
General/trade
ISBN-13:
9780764371998
ISBN-10:
0764371991
Weight:
1.6oz
Dimensions:
6" x 9"
File:
Schiffer Publishing-schiffer_20260521_010800_delta-20260521.xml
Folder:
Schiffer Publishing
List Price:
$35.00
Pub Discount:
65
As low as:
$30.10
Publisher Identifier:
P-MISC
Discount Code:
C
Country of Origin:
India
Case Pack:
12
Overview
This manuscript was originally written with pen on paper in solitary confinement, inside the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth. The USDB is the military's maximum-security prison. The author, Calvin Gibbs, is currently serving a life sentence for three counts of premeditated murder.
Calvin Gibbs was accused and convicted of instigating a series of three murders in the Maywand District of Afghanistan, all of which occured in 2010. The killings were carried out by a platoon of soldiers from the US Army's 2nd Infantry Division. The platoon is alleged to having simulated the rules of engagement, staging the murders of three unarmed Afghan civilians as legitimate combat actions. This story became international news during the Army's investigation into the killings. Twelve soldiers were charged, and 11 received convictions from military courts. This group of soldiers has come to be known in the media and popular culture as the "Kill Team."
Over the course of the trials, a then-26-year-old NCO from Montana named Calvin Gibbs was characterized by several of the accused and their legal teams as the ringleader of the Kill Team. Gibbs, who pled not guilty, received by far the stiffest sentence, life in Leavenworth. Some of the convicted soldiers have granted access to the media, including several who were interviewed extensively for a 2013 documentary film called The Kill Team. Outside of his statements in court, Calvin Gibbs has never provided any public statement regarding the murders, until now.
In this book, Gibbs provides a detailed account of the tour in Afghanistan during which the killings occurred, along with the arrest, confinement, investigations, and trial that followed. Gibbs testifies that he was not present for the first and third murders, and that the alleged second murder was a legitimate combat action. He asserts that he was mistreated by the military justice system and betrayed by his fellow soldiers.
Calvin Gibbs was accused and convicted of instigating a series of three murders in the Maywand District of Afghanistan, all of which occured in 2010. The killings were carried out by a platoon of soldiers from the US Army's 2nd Infantry Division. The platoon is alleged to having simulated the rules of engagement, staging the murders of three unarmed Afghan civilians as legitimate combat actions. This story became international news during the Army's investigation into the killings. Twelve soldiers were charged, and 11 received convictions from military courts. This group of soldiers has come to be known in the media and popular culture as the "Kill Team."
Over the course of the trials, a then-26-year-old NCO from Montana named Calvin Gibbs was characterized by several of the accused and their legal teams as the ringleader of the Kill Team. Gibbs, who pled not guilty, received by far the stiffest sentence, life in Leavenworth. Some of the convicted soldiers have granted access to the media, including several who were interviewed extensively for a 2013 documentary film called The Kill Team. Outside of his statements in court, Calvin Gibbs has never provided any public statement regarding the murders, until now.
In this book, Gibbs provides a detailed account of the tour in Afghanistan during which the killings occurred, along with the arrest, confinement, investigations, and trial that followed. Gibbs testifies that he was not present for the first and third murders, and that the alleged second murder was a legitimate combat action. He asserts that he was mistreated by the military justice system and betrayed by his fellow soldiers.









