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Bergdahl’s Biggest Worry Is Rare ‘Misbehavior Before the Enemy’ Charge
Foreign Policy Magazine's The Cable Blog ^ | March 30, 2015 | Kate Brannen

Posted on 04/16/2015 1:38:44 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

n addition to desertion, Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl faces an unusual charge: misbehavior before the enemy. Of the two, it is the far more serious charge, carrying with it a maximum punishment of life behind bars, a dishonorable discharge, a reduction in rank, and the loss of the tens of thousands of dollars of pay and benefits Bergdahl earned after joining the military over six years ago.

The misbehavior charge is so rare that there aren’t many examples of how the military justice system has handled it in the past. The Army said that it had such a case in 2005, but wouldn’t provide any details without a Freedom of Information Act request. The Marine Corps last leveled the charge against one of its own in 2004 when it went after a lance corporal who had refused to go on convoy duty in Iraq.

The latter case — the United States vs. Thomas H. King — shows how seriously the military takes these offenses and offers the most recent illustration available of what the military means when it accuses a member of the armed forces of committing the little-known crime.

“It’s not apples to apples, but the takeaway from the King case is that the military seriously frowns upon this kind of behavior,” said Zachary Spilman, a civilian defense attorney and lead author of the military justice blog CAAFlog. “If Bergdahl’s case goes to trial, and he gets convicted, the sentence could be significant.”

According to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 99, or “misbehavior before the enemy,” covers a wide range of misconduct, from running away to leaving one’s post “to plunder or pillage” to leaving behind your weapons....

(Excerpt) Read more at foreignpolicy.com ...


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Government; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; army; bergdahl; desertion

1 posted on 04/16/2015 1:38:44 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

There is just no way Obama will allow any conviction of Berghdal. He is completely invested in the muslim traitor and the “optics” are the most important thing to Obama. I would hate to be the prosecutor in this case.


2 posted on 04/16/2015 1:42:41 AM PDT by Organic Panic
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

There is just no way Obama will allow any conviction of Berghdal. He is completely invested in the muslim traitor and the “optics” are the most important thing to Obama. I would hate to be the prosecutor in this case.


3 posted on 04/16/2015 1:42:48 AM PDT by Organic Panic
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To: Organic Panic

He actually should have been charged with treason and defecting to the enemy. But I suspect that the Army knew there was no way Obama would let that happen, so they got as close to it as they could with this charge.


4 posted on 04/16/2015 2:29:13 AM PDT by livius
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To: livius

If Bergdahl would just say he was nuts, and was nuts prior to the Coast Guard boot-camp, nuts when they discharged him from the Coast Guard, and nuts when the Army signed him up....he might have a slightly better case. As it stands now...with a combat-experience jury...I don’t see him getting off either episode and he’s liable to spend a minimum of ten years in prison (maybe even life).

When he is finally let go....I’m betting he packs up a bag and leaves the US within six months.


5 posted on 04/16/2015 3:04:42 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I predict a plea deal that involves no confinement.


6 posted on 04/16/2015 5:38:36 AM PDT by Old Retired Army Guy (frequently.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The rest of it:

“... And, as the King case shows, you don’t even

have to leave your base to be found guilty of it.

In early 2004, King, a Marine lance corporal,

deployed to Iraq as part of a Marine Corps

security battalion tasked with protecting

convoys delivering supplies and ammunition to

other units.

In March, he refused to provide security for a

convoy about to leave Al Asad Air Base in

Anbar province, according to documents from

his case. Afraid of getting killed in combat, King

“refused to accept ammunition for his rifle,

refused to carry a loaded weapon as a

member of the convoy, and refused the option

of not carrying a rifle but serving as a driver

for the convoy.”

Following this standoff, King was sent to a staff

psychiatrist for evaluation. He was deemed

mentally fit and returned to his unit. But the

next day, he disobeyed orders again, and was

found to be disrespectful toward officers

more senior than him, according to court

records.

The staff psychiatrist monitored him closely

over the next several days, and concluded that

while he had experienced an “operational

stress reaction,” King was competent to face

the legal consequences of his actions.

One month later, in April 2004, King was

charged with misbehavior before the enemy

and an array of other offenses. He pleaded

guilty to all of them.

But several months after his conviction, King

appealed, arguing that his guilty pleas were

invalid because he was mentally incompetent

at the time. A year had passed since the case,

and King’s legal counsel noted that the Marine

had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder by a

psychiatrist with the Veterans Affairs

Department.

In a 2005 appeal, King’s lawyer also said his

client’s guilty pleas didn’t hold up because it

was never proved that his actions took place

“before the enemy.”

But a panel of judges disagreed and in 2006,

King’s conviction was upheld. He was

sentenced to confinement for one year, had

his rank reduced, had to forfeit his pay, and

was given a bad-conduct discharge.

The judges found that even though King’s

refusals to go on duty occurred while still

inside the base, his actions still took place

“before the enemy,” because “enemy forces

operated in the immediate area around the

base.”

In its appeal decision, the panel also said King

“displayed cowardice at a time when his unit

was about to embark on a tactical operation in

an area teeming with both organized and

unorganized forces of the Iraqi insurgency.”

In other words, the fact that he was still on

base didn’t matter.

Unlike King, Bergdahl was stationed at a

remote outpost in Paktika province, not on a

sprawling U.S. military base. And he willingly

walked off it, something King never did. Still,

the military believes both men basically

committed the same crime.

In its summary of his charges, the Army says

that on June 30, 2009, Bergdahl endangered

the safety of Observation Post Mest, a remote

Army base in eastern Afghanistan, and Task

Force Yukon, by walking off the post alone and

without authority, wrongfully causing search

and recovery operations. He did all of this

“before the enemy,” according to the charge

sheet.

But this charge has nothing to do with what

Bergdahl did during his five years as a prisoner

of the Taliban.

“There is no evidence of misbehavior of any

kind while he was held captive,” Bergdahl’s

lawyer, Eugene Fidell, wrote in a March 2 letter

to Gen. Mark Milley, who was tasked with the

decision whether to charge Bergdahl. A copy

of the letter was shared with Foreign Policy.

The letter states that Bergdahl’s first attempt

at escaping his Taliban captors occurred within

a few hours of being taken prisoner. During his

time in captivity, according to Bergdahl, he

was beaten, tortured and held in a cage.

In his letter, Fidell argues that Bergdahl’s

“nearly five years of harsh captivity” should be

taken into account. He says it would be

“unduly harsh” to impose on him “the lifetime

stigma of a court-martial conviction.”

Photo by U.S. Army via Getty Images “


7 posted on 04/16/2015 5:48:30 AM PDT by WildHighlander57 ((WildHighlander57, returning after lurking since 2000)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Abandoning post and running from the enemy is desertion, abandoning post and running to the enemy is what traitors do. Bergdahl is a traitor. Men died searching for the traitor. Top enemy commanders - terrorists - where traded, against military recommendation for their continued imprisonment and warning that these terrorists continue to pose a high risk to the U.S., for Bergdahl’s release. The Obama administration continuously interferes with the prosecution of Bergdahl.

It is beyond a reasonable doubt that Obama’s allegiance lies with the enemy. The Bergdahl incident is only one of many instances of Obama giving aid and comfort to the enemy.


8 posted on 04/16/2015 5:53:33 AM PDT by Ray76 (Obama says, "Unlike my mum, Ruth has all the documents needed to prove who Mark's father was.")
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