US | Bradley Manning Manning Acknowledges He Made a Noose in Custody Prosecutors say it shows he needed extra-tight security By John Johnson Posted Nov 30, 2012 6:09 PM CST Copied In this courtroom sketch, Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, center, describes a layout of his pretrial confinement cell in a Quantico, Va. (AP Photo/William Hennessy) Bradley Manning's pretrial hearing continued today, with a prosecutor showing the court a knotted noose that the Army private made after he was charged with giving classified documents to WikiLeaks. Manning admitted that he contemplated suicide soon after his arrest in Iraq, but he said those feelings quickly subsided and were no longer present by the time he was transferred to the Quantico military brig in Virginia, reports the Guardian and AP. His state of mind is critical in this particular hearing: Manning is arguing that charges should be dropped or reduced because he was subjected to cruel and unusual punishment while at Quantico. The military, though, says extreme measures were necessary because it feared Manning was going to kill himself. Despite the seriousness of the hearing, Manning managed to draw laughter a few times from the courtroom, including once when he was asked why he requested new underwear while at Quantico. "They still smelled of Iraq," he said. Click for more. Read These Next Marjorie Taylor Greene says her feud has put a target on her back. Trump order brings end to Buddy Holly tribute. Todd Snider, who helped shape Americana music, dies. Guardian recounts the last trip of an Alaskan crab boat. Report an error