Posted on 08/18/2008 7:10:56 AM PDT by xzins
I think Fred ran across this in the defense of Evan.
Implications for “DefendingOurTroops”
Is it even supposed to be transparent?
As the article points out, there are no prohibitions against putting out this information. They simply choose not to.
Good question, and the answer is a qualified yes. An Article 32 investigation is a public forum, as is a court martial. Does that mean it has to be advertised? No. Article 15 punishment (nonjudicial punishment) is not open unless the accused requests that it be open. Administrative discharge boards are not generally open to the public.
Does that mean everybody in the military knows the right answer? No, and we’re so snakebit by what some members of the press do with the information that many commanders/SJAs adopt a “better safe than sorry” approach, which is generally unhelpful.
Colonel, USAFR
Colonel, USAFR
Redact one o’ them “Colonel, USAFRs”.
Colonel, USAFR
Um, yeah, that's right. It's not. And gee willakers! You don't get a jury of your peers either!
The object of Law in civil life is Justice. The object of Law in military life is Discipline. Sometimes the two coincide. When they don’t — too bad.
Awaiting the first, “When you join the military, the only rights you have are for three squares and a cot; you give up the rest” pablum that often shows up.
Tick, tick, tick.
Agreed...entirely too many colonels running around ;-)
Seriously though, the article didn't state who they spoke to at the base...The article only says, "More than half of military bases contacted could not say if military proceedings were going on or who was involved..."
One of the responses the *study* sneered at was, "The official didnt have the information or know where to find it." I wonder what "official" they called, the MP guard shack at the front gate? The PAO? The JAG Office? The installation commander?
I'm willing to bet in any municipal area in the United States, I could ask the dog catcher, or city engineer's office what/how many grand jury hearings were presently convened, and then write an article stating, "The heads of several city and county departments we spoke with had no knowledge whatsoever regarding current grand jury proceedings."
Well, I like military music....
As you should.
Listen here:
http://www.marineband.usmc.mil/audio_resources/discography/index.htm
here: http://www.navyband.navy.mil/sounds.shtml
and here: http://www.usafband.af.mil/recordings/
Me, too -- in its place. Addendum to my Post 8, above: the object of Music in civilian life is Beauty. The object of Music in military life is Discipline.
Is there a pattern forming here?
You don’t actually believe that unjust discipline is a good thing, do you?
Looks like a short wait. The first was posted as you were typing yours (it’s number 8).
Moni Basu, a reporter at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution for 18 years, has been covering the Iraq War since 2002. During the summer of 2007, Basu was assigned to the case of Army Spc. Christopher P. Shore, who was charged with murdering an Iraqi detainee in June 2007 during a raid in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk. Shore, a Georgia native who claimed his platoon sergeant ordered him to finish the wounded detainee, was tried by court-martial at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii.In reporting the story beginning in July 2007, Basu said she was initially tipped off by a report from another newspaper rather than a military officials. After then contacting an Army PAO, Basu said she received a charge sheet that included no factual detail about the alleged crimes. In addition to the general charges filed against Shore, Basu said the PAO would only tell her that the soldiers Article 32 hearing was sometime in October.
As far as the details of the case, the Army wasnt about to tell us anything more than what was on that charge sheet, said Basu, who has been embedded with American military units in Iraq seven times since the war began. Basu said she became reliant on Shores father and civilian defense attorney to learn any details of the case. Eventually Basu traveled from the Journal-Constitutions bureau in Atlanta to Hawaii to cover Shores Article 32 hearing in October. She missed the court-martial because she returned to a new embed assignment in Iraq when it was held.
When Basu returned from Iraq, she waited patiently for the military to release a decision in Shores case, which was particularly important to the Journal-Constitutions readership because Shore was the first Georgia-born soldier charged with murder during Operation Enduring Freedom. Despite the fact that Basu had written several stories about the Shore case before and after Shores criminal proceedings and that she had alerted Army PAOs as to her interest, Basu only learned of the courts initial decision in the matter from the defense attorney, the day after the decision was released. In February 2008, Shore was found guilty of aggravated assault with a loaded firearm instead of murder. If Id waited for [the base PAO] to send it to me, we wouldve been late with the story, Basu said.
Back on the West Coast, North County Times military reporter Teri Figueroa noted that even with Camp Pendletons relatively comprehensive system, the bases docket is typically only updated the Thursday or Friday just before the following weeks proceedings are scheduled. The short notice leaves Figueroa little time to adequately prepare for the complex criminal proceedings that often ensue just days after she is made aware of them. Its a sliver of access. Its like a crack in the door, said Figueroa, in describing Camp Pendletons docketing system. I get a little bit of access, but I need more for it to be viable public access credible, legitimate public access without having to beg.
I remember that the inability to get information is the reason that Evan’s family was on the hook for thousands of dollars in defense expense. They had to fly themselves and a legal team back and forth to Iraq.
It seems to me that the refusal to post information, or place the trial in a location that allowed free access to information, was a mistake in the prosecution. The judge permitted Evan to be disadvantaged in his ability to defend himself.
I would make that item as one concern on my larger list of appealable problems with the trial.
Thanks for posting this, Chaplain. DefendOurMarines.org and DefendOurTroops.org get a fair amount of attention because we get scoops on military justice cases that no one else does.
The other side of the story, however, is that we often get scoops because no one else cares.
I heard recently that Pendleton is dismantling its media center. The PA operation (including the informational website) was once overseen by a lieutenant colonel and now is being run by a gunny sergeant.
Pendleton isn’t trying to be less transparent. They’re doing it because Mark Walker of the NC Times and Chelsea Carter of the AP are the only two media people who show up.
So while the military may have a transparency issue with UCMJ cases, the media isn’t covering them anyway. It’s possible that the personnel contacted by Stars and Stripes were just shocked that anyone would care.
Certainly not. All the parties in military law should strive for justice. I am simply pointing out that in a court-martial setting, esp. during wartime, justice is a secondary consideration. We have all seen it happen.
Why qualify the “yes”? At least some of the men you convict end up in Leavenworth so this isn’t penny ante crap. Can’t the UCMJ process stand up to scrutiny?
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