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Army birther pleads guilty to 1 of 2 charges
AP ^ | December 14, 2010 | AP

Posted on 12/14/2010 9:25:59 AM PST by Smokeyblue

An Army doctor who disobeyed orders to deploy to Afghanistan because he questions Barack Obama's eligibility to be president has pleaded guilty to 1 of 2 charges against him.

At a court-martial proceeding Tuesday in Maryland, Lt. Col. Terrence Lakin of Greeley, Colo., pleaded guilty to not meeting with a superior when ordered to do so and not showing up at Fort Campbell in Kentucky where he was supposed to report.

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


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: army; birthcertificate; birther; certifigate; lakin; military; naturalborncitizen
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To: humblegunner; tired_old_conservative

Does the destination matter? We’re told the orders were lawful because all he was supposed to do was get on a plane. It doesn’t matter that the plane was to take him to the first leg of what would end up to be a combat post in Afghanistan. So my question is if the arguments would be any different if the plane was going to land him in Iran at a combat post.

And it’s a critical question, IMHO. I’ve been told (by implication) that because Article 10 allows brigade commanders to order men onto planes that any of their orders to get on a plane is lawful and it doesn’t matter where the plane will land or for what purpose.

Yet I’ve also been told directly that if Lakin’s brigade commanders had deployed him to Iran for combat operations Lakin would be totally justified to disobey and the brigade commanders would be in deep trouble.

My question is what’s the difference? Either the destination of the plane matters, or it doesn’t. What is so special about a deployment for combat operations in Iran?

I can’t remember if it was you who said it, TOC, but it was said that Congress authorized Operation Enduring Freedom. I asked where that was done, because when I search all I can find is SJ Res 23, which did not authorize any PARTICULAR operation but authorized only “the President” to use force in pursuit of those who perpetrated 9-11 or support terrorism. That could be Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, North Korea, Syria, Lebanon, etc. So unless there’s something I’m missing - and if so I sure hope somebody would just come out with it, because I can’t find anything else - the authorization is open-ended and depends totally on the discretion and decision of “the President”.

IOW, the President could just as easily authorize deployments to Iran as to Afghanistan. The legality of the combat deployments - to wherever - however, would be TOTALLY dependent on whether someone Constitutionally acting as “President” had actually ordered the use of force in Iran, or wherever.

The Iran question cuts to the quick on where the authorization to order COMBAT deployments actually comes from. The legal authorization to use force in Afghanistan is the same as was used for Iraq, and is the same as would be used for Iran or a couple dozen other places. And Article 90 makes the lawfulness of deployment orders absolutely dependent on whether the legal authorization for those specific orders has ever happened. Congress legally authorized “the President” to decide to use force. If Joe Biden is the person the Constitution allows to “act as President” and he didn’t give the order, then there has been no lawful order for the use of additional force in Afghanistan. And if an unconstitutional “President” has ordered the use of force, then the order is “contrary to the Constitution” and thus unlawful according to the terms of Article 92(1)

So it is appropriate for us to argue about whether Obama is or isn’t allowed by the Constitution to “act as President”, because that is the CRUX of the issue of lawfulness, according to the actual law and MCM. It is NOT “irrelevant”, and for Lind to say so is in effect to say that brigade commanders can deploy troops for combat anywhere they want, regardless of whether the legal authorization criteria are met (i.e. regardless of whether a Constitutional “President” has ordered the use of force).

That is dangerous, dangerous territory. Those who say that officers should not be able to decide which orders to follow are voicing a legitimate concern, but an even BIGGER concern would be if officers are allowed to decide, on their own, to invade other countries. That’s what’s being swallowed here, in the effort to make sure that an officer isn’t allowed to question the Constitutional legitimacy of the CINC so he can know whether the orders he receives are lawful. In order to prevent due diligence on the part of officers who are sworn to protect and defend the Constitution, Lind has laid groundwork that would allow any brigade commander to decide, on his own, to invade Iran or Yemen.

This is not chicken doo-doo. This is basic, gut-level, rubber-to-the-road application of the whole philosophy behind the chain of command. If we allow this to be undone, we are treading dangerous, unprecedented territory.

And what bothers me so much about this issue - why I am so emotionally invested in this and why to be less than emotionally invested would be to forget everything I am and care about - is the fact that the very CRUX of the issue has been called irrelevant in order to make sure that Lakin can’t defend himself or secure witnesses in his behalf as the Sixth Amendment guarantees for every accused person.

We can argue all day and beyond, whether Obama is Constitutionally able to “act as President”. All I’m saying is that argument deserves to be made. And it is a travesty to deny a defendant his Sixth Amendment rights, forcing him to have to try to convince a judge that up is down as his only defense.

This is not a political question. It is a question of the rule of law. Courts-martial are not the right place for this debate to take place. The right place is SCOTUS, but the stinkin’ cowards would rather put the country in jeopardy than make an uncomfortable decision. Unless the military had investigated - as Lakin asked them for a year to do, and got nothing from them - and had KNOWN that Obama is Constitutionally able to “act as President” they should never have charged him with disobeying a lawful order, because neither they nor anybody else in this country can even say whether Obama’s orders or the orders down the chain of command to implement them are “lawful”.

Obama isn’t even supposed to be able to get a federal paycheck unless he has proven that he is a legal resident of the US. He hasn’t even done that, and yet he’s holding the nuclear football. He couldn’t be a maid cleaning out toilets in the White House with the documentation he’s provided.

Every soldier out there - your son and my nephews included - is in a position where they really can’t know for sure whether they have lawful authorization to do what they’re doing. I don’t know about you, but I don’t like the thought that my nephews could be found guilty of war crimes in some international war tribunal because the US military system didn’t bother to check whether the CINC could even legally clean latrines for your son, my nephews, and men like Lakin.

A person can argue that the oath of office makes a person “the President”. I don’t see that in the Constitution anywhere. The process I see in the Constitution allows SCOTUS to decide all cases involving the laws and Constitution, but that doesn’t mean that Roberts can decide on his own whether the Pres elect “qualifies”, without it being an actual CASE.

But my point in all this is that these questions are critical to the lawfulness of combat deployment orders based on Obama’s orders rather than Joe Biden’s.

TOC, I think it was you who clarified how the Article 90 charge translates to Article 92 charges. That discrepancy hadn’t made sense to me and your explanation was exactly what I needed. Thank you so much. The phrase about the orders given through the chain of command wasn’t clear to me. It’s still not totally clear to me. Is 92(1) saying that the specific, direct orders used to implement a general order are themselves considered to be general orders as well?

Sorry this is so long. I’m REALLY sorry that my poor use of words has side-tracked what really matters about this issue. I am nothing; my emotions are neither here nor there to the bigger picture. But we’ve got serious damage being done by this precedent. Or - if this will never be precedent because everybody knows brigade commanders can’t send troops to war without valid orders from the legally-authorized person - we’ve got an innocent man singled out to be in a court-martial where everybody violates his Sixth Amendment rights by willfully ignoring what everybody knows.

No matter how you slice it, it’s an incredibly sad day for the US Constitution and everybody who loves and defends it.


621 posted on 12/15/2010 6:07:30 AM PST by butterdezillion
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To: Jim Robinson

I acted stupidly. I let my emotions get the best of me. Our military is comprised of honorable men and women who bear no responsibility for the crimes of the POTUS. I deeply regret my statement saying I felt like spitting on the military and do hereby apologize to all FReeper vets, especially those from the Vietnam era who were actually spit upon and those who received hostile treatment because of their service in Iraq or Afghanistan.

I pray that we all will work together to see the US Constitution upheld.

Humbly and Sincerely,
butterdezillion

Can I edit the original offending post to include this apology?


622 posted on 12/15/2010 6:10:45 AM PST by butterdezillion
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To: PA-RIVER
So when Lakin goes to prison, is it common for men in Leavenworth to take a beating at the hands of other inmates?

Never having been there I couldn't say. But I suspect that the Army runs a tight ship. Lakin should be fine.

Do you think they will separate him from others for being a political prisoner?

I'm sure he'll be in the general population with the other inmates.

It might not look good if he's killed after confronting the leader off the free world, simply asking for a routine document.

Lakin will be free to continue his quest once he's out of the Army entirely. As he should have done to begin with.

Well, I guess we are not the leader anymore. We are now more of a Socialist Communist Follower nation.

Speaking for yourself, of course.

623 posted on 12/15/2010 6:17:30 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: centurion316
Its Barack, not Barak.

Sorry pal, but I don't/won't give the pos the courtesy of spelling hi name correctly just as I won't capitalize his so called region

It's my protest of him, idiot.

624 posted on 12/15/2010 6:18:16 AM PST by Las Vegas Ron (The Tree of Liberty did not grow from an ACORN!)
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To: truth_seeker

How about if you obeyed the KP duty order but put in a request for a year or so in different places all over the military to find out whether or not the CINC could give lawful orders - because you recognized that your brothers in arms are carrying out much more significant orders and could be guilty of war crimes if not properly authorized?

This isn’t KP duty we’re talking about. And this isn’t a glib WTH kind of a ploy. He gave the military a year to get their answers - to questions that should have been even more deeply disturbing to the head of the command chain than to Lakin himself, if they had cared about their oath to protect and defend the Constitution and had given two moments’ thought about the well-being of the hundreds of thousands of men and women depending on them for protection.

We can talk evidence, and there is plenty of that too. But at the heart of the matter is that the entire chain of command blew off the US Constitution and the well-being of those under their charge for a year. And now they’re punishing Lakin for caring and for exposing their utter apathy.


625 posted on 12/15/2010 6:19:37 AM PST by butterdezillion
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To: truth_seeker

How about if you obeyed the KP duty order but put in a request for a year or so in different places all over the military to find out whether or not the CINC could give lawful orders - because you recognized that your brothers in arms are carrying out much more significant orders and could be guilty of war crimes if not properly authorized?

This isn’t KP duty we’re talking about. And this isn’t a glib WTH kind of a ploy. He gave the military a year to get their answers - to questions that should have been even more deeply disturbing to the head of the command chain than to Lakin himself, if they had cared about their oath to protect and defend the Constitution and had given two moments’ thought about the well-being of the hundreds of thousands of men and women depending on them for protection.

We can talk evidence, and there is plenty of that too. But at the heart of the matter is that the entire chain of command blew off the US Constitution and the well-being of those under their charge for a year. And now they’re punishing Lakin for caring and for exposing their utter apathy.


626 posted on 12/15/2010 6:20:33 AM PST by butterdezillion
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To: PA-RIVER
Lakin failed and the Scumbag in the Oval Office wins and gets to drive us into bankruptcy for two more years, and gives us all the middle finger for daring to ask for his records.

I believe he's been doing that for 2 years. And Lakin has done nothing to speed the change of that. Nothing.

627 posted on 12/15/2010 6:32:14 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: danamco; mojitojoe
If you are, you certainly worked your ass off to deserving be on it!!!

Being called 'troll' by people like you and Mo-Joe is like being called 'ugly' by Helen Thomas.

628 posted on 12/15/2010 6:33:41 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Non-Sequitur
We do have a communist leader who apologizes for our past leadership. Just calling them as I see them.

July 2010: LEAVENWORTH, Kansas - A military prisoner struck with a baseball bat during a fight at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth has died ....

I guess this kind of stuff happens in every prison. Cuba, Kansas.... Whatever.

629 posted on 12/15/2010 6:44:42 AM PST by PA-RIVER ( POTUS is a dishonest disrespectful POS who can't come clean with the Constitution)
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To: butterdezillion

“But at the heart of the matter is that the entire chain of command blew off the US Constitution and the well-being of those under their charge for a year. “

No.

The entire chain recognizes that Obama was elected by a majority of Americans, by the Electoral College, and accepted as President by the Congress and US Supreme Court - AND the American People.

The entire chain recognizes that their role is NOT in deciding who the President is, but accepting the decision of the voters, the states, Congress & the Supreme Court.

You and a handful of birthers want the US military to use force to overthrow what every court, every state, the Electoral College & the Congress - and the people - accept, and to do so based on Internet rumors and weirdo legal theories.

Lakin was NEVER the right venue. Any state could rule that a NBC requires two citizen parents, or rule that Obama won’t be allowed on the ballot in 2012 unless he shows a long form birth certificate - but you cannot convince 1 state out of 50 to do so. Nor will you ever convince the US military to overthrow the government.


630 posted on 12/15/2010 6:56:08 AM PST by Mr Rogers (Poor history is better than good fiction, and anything with lots of horses is better still)
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To: PA-RIVER
"So when Lakin goes to prison, is it common for men in Leavenworth to take a beating at the hands of other inmates? "

No, violence at the disciplinary barracks (USDB)is rare, not completely unheard of, but almost. Military prisons are NOT civilian prisons, in almost every way. Other than the bars and locks on the doors, they bear almost other no similarities to their civilian counterparts. They're remarkably clean (especially Leavenworth, which isn't even 10-years old), very well run, and prisoner discipline is maintained, but it's done so in a respectful way. Despite what happened at Abu Grahib (which was staffed by reservists), active-duty military prison guards are incredibly professional. Plus, it's really not that big, at all. More similarly sized to a county jail of a moderately sized county.

I will say that one downside to Leavenworth is that a surprising number of confinees are there on sexual-assault related convictions. This is dissimilar to a civilian prison where the plurality of prisoners are incarcerated because of drug offenses. So, your chances of sharing a cell with a person convicted of rape, are much greater at USDB, compared to a civilian prison. "Do you think they will separate him from others for being a political prisoner?"

Political prisoner - LOL. Oh man, you're killing it. Who they seperate are the violent offenders,

631 posted on 12/15/2010 6:59:47 AM PST by OldDeckHand
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To: OldDeckHand
So if a soldier in Cuba publicly challenged Fidel Castros Authority and wound up in a Cuban prison, and the trial allowed no discovery of evidence for the defendants claims, would you call him a political prisoner? Or a capitalist pig, bent on freedom?
632 posted on 12/15/2010 7:17:50 AM PST by PA-RIVER ( POTUS is a dishonest disrespectful POS who can't come clean with the Constitution)
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To: usmcobra

There are several birthers who are capable of rational discussion. You ain’t one of ‘em, bud.


633 posted on 12/15/2010 7:23:46 AM PST by BuckeyeTexan (There are those that break and bend. I'm the other kind.)
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To: OldDeckHand

Show me where in article 66 it says that all appeals are limited only to those that have plead “not guilty” and been convicted.

You should know better, the purpose of Article 66 is to protect members of the armed forces from being railroaded in kangeroo courts and or forced to plead guilty through any number of methods of subverting the legal processes.

Does the name Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins III ring a bell, he is perhaps a prefect example of a Service member that was railroaded and released under article 66.


634 posted on 12/15/2010 7:26:20 AM PST by usmcobra (.Islam: providing Live Targets for United States Marines since 1786!)
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To: Non-Sequitur

If he starts callin’ me “dearie,” I might have to hurt him.


635 posted on 12/15/2010 7:27:20 AM PST by BuckeyeTexan (There are those that break and bend. I'm the other kind.)
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To: danamco

Right on, precious. You got that one correct.


636 posted on 12/15/2010 7:30:01 AM PST by BuckeyeTexan (There are those that break and bend. I'm the other kind.)
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To: butterdezillion

Right on, butter. You’re forgiven. (Not by me, cuz I’m not a vet. But you know what I mean.)


637 posted on 12/15/2010 7:33:36 AM PST by BuckeyeTexan (There are those that break and bend. I'm the other kind.)
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To: BuckeyeTexan

Show me one instance where I belittled you with the sort of veiled threats and innuendo common to flame wars and I might even accept that I am not capable of rational discussion.


638 posted on 12/15/2010 7:33:54 AM PST by usmcobra (.Islam: providing Live Targets for United States Marines since 1786!)
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To: OldDeckHand

I hope he stays off the baseball field, they may not like a guy who challenges the first Kenyan born president...

July 2010: LEAVENWORTH, Kansas - A military prisoner struck with a baseball bat during a fight at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth has died ....


639 posted on 12/15/2010 7:46:11 AM PST by PA-RIVER ( POTUS is a dishonest disrespectful POS who can't come clean with the Constitution)
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To: usmcobra
"The Government Introduces Obama’s Ineligibility

Recall that the government would rather bury LTC Lakin on a bunch of piled on charges than address the issue of Obama’s ineligibility.  In what can be termed as a little ‘divine intervention’ the fifth government witness actually stated the reason why LTC Lakin refused his orders–Obama’s eligibility.  You should have seen the prosecution shut that lady down right away! ""


http://drkatesview.wordpress.com/2010/12/14/standing-with-lt-col-terry-lakin/

640 posted on 12/15/2010 7:48:00 AM PST by Red Steel
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