Rep. Duncan Hunter Duncan HunterDCCC reserves new ad buys in competitive districts, adds new members to 'Red to Blue' program Wife of former Rep. Duncan Hunter sentenced to 8 months of home confinement Harris endorses Democrat in tight California House race MORE (R-Calif.) is defending a Navy SEAL accused of war crimes, saying he also took pictures of bodies while serving in the Marine Corps, according to the Times of San Diego.

“Eddie did one bad thing that I’m guilty of too — taking a picture of the body and saying something stupid,” Hunter said at an event in California on Saturday, referring to Navy SEAL Chief Eddie Gallagher.

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Gallagher is accused of murdering a wounded teenage ISIS fighter in Iraq in 2017. He allegedly sent a photo of the prisoner to a fellow SEAL afterward with the text: “Good story behind this, got him with my hunting knife.”

Hunter said Saturday that while he had taken pictures “just like that when I was overseas,” he had never posted them to social media or texted them.

“A lot of my peers," he said, "have done the exact same thing.”

Fellow members of SEAL Team 7’s Alpha Platoon have also claimed Gallagher shot a school-age Iraqi girl and an elderly man dead from a sniper’s roost and “indiscriminately” fired bullets and rockets into Iraqi neighborhoods.

President Trump Donald John TrumpBiden on Trump's refusal to commit to peaceful transfer of power: 'What country are we in?' Romney: 'Unthinkable and unacceptable' to not commit to peaceful transition of power Two Louisville police officers shot amid Breonna Taylor grand jury protests MORE is reportedly considering pardoning Gallagher.

Hunter said that while he would like to see Gallagher pardoned, his court-martial should go forward to demonstrate “how disgusting the military justice system is when it’s run by lawyers and bureaucrats [who] go after the war-fighter,” and to potentially embarrass the Navy.

Hunter was indicted in 2017 on allegations of wire fraud and campaign finance violations, and compared his own case to Gallagher’s, according to the newspaper, saying that civilian and military prosecutors were chiefly focused on “how famous can they get.”

Those charges are still pending.