Posted on 11/06/2003 7:40:01 AM PST by sr4402
DENVER (AP) Simone Holcomb's choice was between duty and family. She chose family, and now the military may punish her. Holcomb, an Army medic married to an Army sergeant, refused an order to return to duty in Iraq because it could have meant losing two of their seven children in a custody battle.
"For me to get on a plane and abandon my children would be against the law," Holcomb said Wednesday. "And I don't know how any parent on Earth could leave without knowing how they're going to be taken care of."
Her commanders in Iraq have told her by e-mail that she is absent without leave, she said.
Holcomb, 30, and her husband, Sgt. 1st Class Vaughn Holcomb, 40, lived with their children at Fort Carson near Colorado Springs when both were sent to Iraq in February.
Family members were taking care of their children, but the couple returned on emergency leave in September when Vaughn Holcomb's ex-wife went to court to get full custody of two of the children from their previous marriage.
A judge said one of the Holcombs had to remain home or they would lose custody. Simone Holcomb said she decided to stay because she is a reservist while her husband has 20 years of active-duty service and is near retirement.
She also said her husband, a tank platoon sergeant with the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, would be more sorely missed by his unit. He is now back in Iraq.
The Army requires two-soldier families to agree on custody plans before deployments so that children are taken care of, said Col. Rich Thomas of Army Forces Central Command in Atlanta.
"When there are extenuating circumstances, we obviously want to find a solution to work for both sides," he said.
Army officials in the United States said they could not confirm Simone Holcomb's status without talking to her unit commanders in Iraq.
Officials said the punishment for going AWOL ranges up to discharge or imprisonment. Holcomb said she has been told only that she would forfeit all her pay since disobeying the order to return to Iraq, but hasn't been told what other measures she might face.
The Army inspector general is reviewing the case, said a spokesman for Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., who intervened at Simone Holcomb's request.
Holcomb said her commanders had been sympathetic, extending her leave when the court process dragged. She still thought they would help even after they rejected her request to be taken off active duty on Oct. 3, within hours of the final custody hearing.
"We're all human beings and most of us are parents. Just that normal human bond I thought would work wonders," she said.
Vaughn Holcomb's mother, Susan Bearer, who helped care for the children while the parents were in Iraq, wonders why the Army hasn't reassigned her daughter-in-law so she could stay in the Army while caring for her family.
"We want them to put her back on duty at Fort Carson, like before," Bearer said. "Let her do her service there where she could still be with the children."
Holcomb has told the children she's not leaving again, but she doesn't think they believer her. They know she's worried.
"For them, the Army is bigger than the world and it holds the strings to all of us," Holcomb said. "I feel terrible because I make these promises and now txe Army could take it all away."
(Excerpt) Read more at usatoday.com ...
It is actually the judge that is at fault and he should be impeached.
You shouldn't make promises you can't keep. Like the one you made when you signed your enlistment papers....
2) and, she is still responsibile for failing to perform her duty. I know she is in a tought situation, but when she signed on the dotted line she placed herself in that situation.
Enough said. Wait until she has been AWOL for 30 days then issue a federal warrant for desertion and throw the book at her.
Except for temporary conditions, in no case should a member of the Armed Forces not be able to deploy as ordered. Being a parent is a personal decision they made and should not affect military considerations for assignment whatsoever. They were both aware of this when they took their oath of enlistment.
Bingo!
The Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act would allow them to stay any civil court case against them until after the deployment.
I'm betting there's more to this case that isn't in the story.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.