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  • 7
    hours
    ago

    Sexual misconduct investigation under way at Alaskan base, military officials say

    Mark Farmer / AP file

    Workers lower a ground-based missile interceptor into its silo at Fort Greely near Delta Junction, Alaska, on July 22, 2004.

    By Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube, NBC News

    The Army has launched an investigation into possible sexual misconduct or sexual assault at the Space and Missile Defense Command at Fort Greely, Alaska, military and defense officials tell NBC News.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The sources report there are allegations that an Army commander or commanders had sexual relations with female soldiers under their command.

    It's not clear whether the alleged contact was forced or consensual. If it was forced, it could result in criminal sexual assault charges. Consensual relations with a subordinate would still be a violation of regulations.

    The commanding general ordered the investigation upon learning of the allegations. 


    Fort Greely is near Delta Junction in the Alaskan interior. It is a launch site for anti-ballistic-missile missiles, and because of the bitter winters there it is home to the Cold Regions Test Center.

    The Department of Defense has been ramping up efforts to fight sexual assault within the ranks. Earlier this month, the department said that the number of cases increased sharply in the last year. The military has also been hit with a number of high-profile cases within units that investigate sexual abuse.

    In Congress, there have been a number of proposals to address how the military investigates and prosecutes sexual assault cases.

    On Friday, President Barack Obama called on graduates of the Naval Academy to “live with integrity” and help restore trust in a military.

    “Those who commit sexual assault are not only committing a crime, they threaten the trust and discipline that make our military strong,” he said at the graduation ceremony in Annapolis, Md.

    Jim Miklaszewski is NBC News' chief Pentagon correspondent. Courtney Kube is NBC News' Pentagon producer.

    45 comments

    Lots of neanderthals on this post. "We men can't control ourselves so you women will just have to make sacrifices because of it." and yes Alaska has some real issues with rape and incest. The stats are ugly. And after seeing what was posted here I'm not surprised.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, sexual-assault, sexual-misconduct, fort-greely, space-and-missile-defense-command
  • 16
    May
    2013
    7:12pm, EDT

    Army sex-abuse officer dismissed over domestic dispute

    By Jim Miklaszewski, Courtney Kube and Jeff Black, NBC News

    The head of the Army’s equal opportunity and sexual assault-prevention office at Fort Campbell, Ky., has been relieved of his duties, the Pentagon said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    He is the third sex-abuse prevention officer to be dismissed in the past to 10 days.

    However, the Fort Campbell Army officer, whose name was not released, was dismissed over a domestic dispute with his wife, not a sexual-assault case, the Pentagon said.

    The Army lieutenant colonel was arrested by civilian authorities for violating a protective order that was sought by his estranged wife, according to the Pentagon. The couple are in the process of getting a divorce. The officer was released today on a $15,000 bond.

    He holds a protective order against his wife, as well.

    Two other cases involving sex-assault prevention officers do involve sex-abuse-related charges.

    On Tuesday, the Pentagon said an Army sergeant first class, assigned to III Corps at Fort Hood, Texas, is under investigation for allegedly forcing at least one subordinate into prostitution, abusive sexual contact, assault and maltreatment of subordinates. He has been suspended from his duties pending an investigation.

    Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., is joined by colleagues on Capitol Hill while introducing sexual assault legislation that would reform the military justice system.

    On May 6, the Air Force officer in charge of that service's sexual-assault program, Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski, was arrested in an Arlington, Va. parking lot for allegedly groping a woman.

    Krusinksi was charged with sexual battery and removed from his position pending an investigation.

    Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., a member of the Armed Services Committee, is spearheading a bill to prevent military commanders from handling sexual assault cases that involve subordinates.

    Related:

    Gillibrand leads Senate charge for protocol changes in military sexual assault cases

    Army sergeant assigned to sex-abuse prevention being investigated for pimping, sexual assault

    Air Force's sex-abuse prevention honcho charged with sexual battery

    Obama: 'No tolerance' for military sexual assault

    'Every American should be outraged': Military sees sharp increase in sex-assault cases

    28 comments

    this is like having a drunk be your AA sponsor.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, army, sexual-assault, fort-campbell
  • 16
    May
    2013
    5:21pm, EDT

    Male rape survivors tackle military assault in tough-guy culture

    Former Navy Petty Officer Third Class Brian Lewis talks about a sexual assault "epidemic" within the U.S. military while speaking on Capitol Hill Thursday. Lewis emphasizes that his chain of command "failed" him during his time in the U.S. Navy.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Amid the legislation and indignation sparked by the military's sexual abuse crisis, male rape survivors are stepping forward to remind officials that men are targeted more often than women inside a tough-guy culture that, they say, routinely deems male victims as “liars and trouble makers.”

    The Pentagon estimates that last year 13,900 of the 1.2 million men on active duty endured sexual assault while 12,100 of the 203,000 women in uniform experienced the same crime — or 38 men per day versus 33 women per day. Yet the Defense Department also acknowledges “male survivors report at much lower rates than female survivors.”

    “As a culture, we’ve somewhat moved past the idea that a female wanted this trauma to occur, but we haven’t moved past that for male survivors,” said Brian Lewis, a rape survivor who served in the Navy. “In a lot of areas of the military, men are still viewed as having wanted it or of being homosexual. That’s not correct at all. It’s a crime of power and control.

    “But also, you’re instantly viewed as a liar and a troublemaker (when a man reports a sex crime), and there’s the notion that you have abandoned your shipmates, that you took a crap all over your shipmates, that you misconstrued their horseplay,” he added.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Lewis, who was raped by a male superior officer aboard a Navy ship in 2000, spoke Thursday at a press conference introducing a bill that seeks to strip serious sex assaults from the military’s chain of command. At that event, he said: “Too often male survivors are ignored and marginalized.”

    “The biggest reasons men don’t come forward (with sex assault reports) are the fear of retaliation (from fellow troops), the fear of being viewed in a weaker light, and the fact there are very few, if any, services for male survivors,” Lewis told NBC News.

    Men in the spotlight
    All sexual assault response coordinators within the military are instructed to provide “gender-responsive, culturally competent and recovery-oriented” resources, said Cynthia O. Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoman. 

    “Based on that guidance, each of the services customizes its training and implementation specific to their service,” Smith said. DOD offers a 24/7 “safe helpline” providing anonymous victim support, and its staffers “have been trained to assist male victims.”

    Still, the Defense Department acknowledges it must do more to help male victims.

    “A focus of our prevention efforts over the next several months is specifically geared towards male survivors and will include (learning) why male survivors report at much lower rates than female survivors, and determining the unique support and assistance male survivors need,” Smith said.

    The Pentagon “has reached out to organizations supporting male survivors for assistance and information to help inform our way ahead,” she added.

    “I applaud that stand on behalf of male survivors,” Lewis said. “However, I would be interested in hearing what organizations they are partnering with considering there are none especially geared for male survivors of military sexual trauma.”

    Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., is joined by a group of colleagues on Capitol Hill while introducing sexual assault legislation that would reform the military justice system.

    'Critical' part of process
    At Protect Our Defenders, a leading advocacy group for male and female service members who've survived sexual assaults, president Nancy Parrish said she would welcome the chance to offer guidance to the Pentagon as it develops better programs to support male sex assault victims.

    “As of yet, we have not been asked to participate in such an endeavor,” Parrish said. “For the success of the military efforts to end the ongoing epidemic of male and female military sexual assaults, it is critical that survivors are part of the process."

    An annual DOD report on sexual abuse, released May 7, described separate attacks on two male soldiers who were shoved down by fellow troops then sodomized with a plastic bottle or broom handle.

    Next month, a documentary called “Justice Denied” — which explores sexual assaults against men in the military — premiers at the Albuquerque Film and Media Experience.

    Assaults on men have been “carefully hidden from the public and covered up,” not only by the victims themselves but also by superiors within the chain of command, contends the film’s producer and co-director Geri Lynn Weinstein-Matthews. “It’s time for men to have their voices heard. It’s time for them to stand up against these vicious attacks and against the deception of some of their commanding officers.” 

    U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel addresses the growing concern over the number of sexual assaults occurring within the U.S. military.

    Related:

    • Senators seek to reform military's 'unacceptable' sex abuse policies
    • Gillibrand leads charge for protocol changes in sexual assault cases
    • US military faces historic tipping point on rape epidemic
    • Army sergeant assigned to sex-abuse prevention investigated for pimping, sexual assault
    • Air Force's sex-abuse prevention honcho charged with sexual battery

    332 comments

    Roger- Few, if any, sexual assaults committed by men on other men are actually from a homosexual on a straight man. In fact, it's far more common in these cases for a homosexual or PERCEIVED homosexual to be raped by "straight" men than vice versa, as rape is never really about sex, but about domina …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, military, sexual-assault, chuck-hagel, sex-assault, male-rape, brian-lewis
  • 16
    May
    2013
    9:41am, EDT

    Senator seeks to reform military's 'unacceptable' sex abuse policies

    Military sources tell NBC News the man in charge of sexual assault prevention in Fort Hood, Texas, may have allegedly coerced a female soldier into prostitution. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    A New York senator introduced a bill Thursday that aims to remove sex crimes from the military’s chain of command — a bid to transform an insulated culture that tends to dampen sex-assault reporting, leaving many victims feeling helpless or hopeless.

    Under the Pentagon’s current justice system, less than 1 percent of accused sexual perpetrators in the military were convicted last year while during 2012 just 9.8 percent of sex-assault victims reported the incidents, according to a Department of Defense report. Many victims feel powerless because their superiors can control everything from whether a case proceeds to whether a guilty verdict is eventually overturned.

    The new proposal by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., rides a rising tide of public anger over separate allegations that two service members tasked with curbing sexual misconduct within the armed forces had themselves committed sexual misconduct:

    • A Fort Hood Army sergeant accused Tuesday of allegedly forcing at least one subordinate soldier into prostitution. There is suspicion that other senior non-commissioned officers were aware of these activities, but the extent of that remains unclear, a government official told NBC News;
    • An Air Force officer arrested May 6 for alleged sexual battery. 

    "When the officer in charge of preventing sexual assault in their ranks is himself arrested for sexual assault — clearly, the strategy we have in place is not working. Twice in just the last two weeks this has happened," Gillibrand said. 

    Some service members have confided to Gillibrand, she said, that following sexual offenses committed against them, the military's current system forced them to seek permission from their perpetrators in order to take their cases to trial. 

    Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York plans to introduce legislation to change the way the military handles allegations of sexual assault. In an exclusive interview on The Last Word, she explained why it should be "more parallel to the civilian system."

    "This is unacceptable — and is long overdue for change," Gillibrand said. 

    Her push to revamp the military's machinery for the investigation and discipline of reported sexual assaults has bipartisan backing. Rep. Dan Benishek, R-Mich., said he will file a companion bill in the House. 

    “Right now, too many sexual assaults in our military go unreported," Benishek said. "Many soldiers are uncomfortable reporting the details of these traumatic events. My daughter is a military veteran so I know exactly the kind of hard-working women we have in our armed forces. This situation is a travesty and we need to fix it now.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "We need to reform how the military handles sexual assault cases and make sure victims aren’t afraid to report a crime," he added. 

    Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was informed Tuesday about the allegations against the Fort Hood sergeant, leaving the Pentagon chief "frustrated, angered, and disappointed over these troubling allegations as well as the breakdown in discipline and standards they imply," said Cynthia Smith, a DoD spokeswoman. 

    Hagel immediately directed every branch to "re-train, re-credential, and re-screen" all sexual assault prevention and response personnel and military recruiters — and he has "made it clear he has not ruled out any options for improving the military's response to sexual assault," Smith said.  

    Under Gilliland's proposed legislation, any reported offense committed by a service member that’s punishable by confinement of one year or more would be handled not by branch and unit commanders — like now — but instead be funneled to independent military prosecutors. Her proposal also seeks to ensure that military commanders may not set aside a guilty finding.  

    She began writing her bill — working with Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. — just two days after her impassioned critique of the military's desire to retain "convening authority" in sex crimes went viral last March. She since has emerged as one of the Senate's loudest proponents for wholesale Pentagon reform on the issue, calling for a format that's more parallel to the civilian legal system. 

    Related:

    • Gillibrand leads Senate charge for protocol changes in military sexual assault cases
    • US military faces historic tipping point on rape epidemic
    • Army sergeant assigned to sex-abuse prevention being investigated for pimping, sexual assault
    • Air Force's sex-abuse prevention honcho charged with sexual battery
    • Obama: 'No tolerance' for military sexual assault
    • 'Every American should be outraged:' Military sees sharp increase in sex assault cases

    438 comments

    start throwing these neanderthals out of the service...strip any due retiree benefits to drive the messsage home...problem solved

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, military, pentagon, air-force, sexual-assault, fort-hood, chuck-hagel, department-of-defense, rape-in-the-military, senator-kirsten-gillibrand
  • 15
    May
    2013
    5:30am, EDT

    U.S. military faces historic tipping point on rape epidemic

    The Army is investigating a sergeant first class whose job is to prevent sexual assault at Fort Hood for allegedly forcing a subordinate into prostitution and allegedly assaulting two others. Rep. Niki Tsongas, D-Mass., is co-chair of the Military Sexual Assault Prevention Caucus, and she joins Chris Jansing to discuss.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    The U.S. military seems increasingly incapable of policing itself or ridding its ranks of sexual predators, watchdogs charge, but the latest litany of accusations — leveled Tuesday at Fort Hood — has thrust the Pentagon to the brink of wholesale reform long sought by victims of sexual assault. 

    With the second member of the military's campaign to stem sexual misconduct falling under investigation — for alleged sexual misconduct — critics were quick to lambast Pentagon brass for "gross negligence" and for maintaining an internal system of investigation and discipline that appears to be in desperate need of being ripped down and rebuilt with fresh independence and transparency. 

    "It is abundantly clear that the military cannot adequately handle its sexual violence crisis from within," said Anu Bhagwati, executive director of Service Women's Action Network and former Marine captain.

    "If military culture is to transform in any meaningful way, we need to break down the doors of silence and make sure our troops who are harmed have access to the same legal remedies as all civilians whom they protect and defend," she added. "We can start by ensuring that military crimes are no longer handled by commanding officers, but rather by impartial attorneys and judges."

    Investigators in Fort Hood, Texas, are looking into allegations that an Army sergeant sexually assaulted three female soldiers and forced one into prostitution. This is only the latest in a string of military sexual assault scandals that has lawmakers demanding answers. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Nancy Parrish, president of the victims advocacy group Protect Our Defenders, agreed that "the Pentagon is responsible for failing to effectively govern its personnel," following news that a Fort Hood Army sergeant first class allegedly forced at least one subordinate soldier into prostitution and sexually assaulted two others. 

    "The problems are so long standing and pervasive that, at a minimum, it constitutes gross negligence on the part of the leadership," Parrish said. 

    Late Tuesday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel directed all branches to "re-train, re-credential, and re-screen all sexual assault prevention and response personnel and military recruiters," according to the Pentagon. 

    'Open to any and all options'
    The Fort Hood scandal, coming just nine days after the sexual battery arrest of an Air Force officer tasked with preventing rape, cranked the volumed on long-standing cries "to get to work reforming the military justice system that clearly isn’t working," said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y. "I believe strongly that to create the kind of real reform that will make a difference we must remove the chain of command from the decision making process for these types of serious offenses.”

    Ironically, hours before the Fort Hood allegations surfaced, Gillibrand was prepping a final draft of her bill — set to be introduced Thursday — that seeks to accomplish precisely that goal: transferring sex crimes from the watch and authority of military brass and instead funneling such cases to independent military prosecutors, said a spokesman for Gillibrand. 

    Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York plans to introduce legislation to change the way the military handles allegations of sexual assault. In an exclusive interview on The Last Word, she explained why it should be "more parallel to the civilian system."

    Her proposal was further hastened by the Pentagon's May 7 revelation that 26,000 troops last year claimed anonymously to be sex-assault victims (up from 19,000 in FY11), and a May 9 White House meeting with lawmakers pitching various ideas to stem the military’s rape crisis.

    “Sexual violence in the military is not new. And it has been allowed to go on in the shadows for far too long," Gillibrand said Tuesday. "Congress would be derelict in its duty of oversight if we just shrugged our shoulders at these 26,000 sons and daughters, husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, and did nothing. We simply have to do better by them."

    The appetite for a dramatic military shift on the issue seems to have reached a tipping point, lawmakers and advocates agree, especially after the Department of Defense signaled Monday that Hagel is "open to any and all options." That marked a clear pivot from Hagel's position as recently as May 7 when he said decisions on sex cases must stay inside the command structure. 

    "Make no mistake," Pentagon press secretary George Little wrote Sunday in a letter to the New York Times, "Mr. Hagel believes sexual assault is one of the urgent matters facing the Defense Department today and will work very closely with the White House and members of Congress to confront this urgent challenge." 

    'Debilitating' crisis
    Gillibrand began writing her bill — working with Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. — just two days after her impassioned critique of the military's desire to retain "convening authority" in sex crimes went viral last March. She chose to include in her bill all military crimes punishable by one year or longer in the brig because she felt sending only rape cases to the Judge Advocate General's Corps would further stigmatize sex-assault victims and create "a two-class system," her spokesman said.  


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Meanwhile, Rep. Dan Benishek, R-Mich., plans to introduce a companion bill in the House, his office confirmed.

    The first embers of true Capitol Hill fury were stoked in February when Air Force Lt. Gen. Craig Franklin reversed the aggravated sexual assault conviction of Lt. Col. James Wilkerson, a fighter pilot. A jury of five military officers found Wilkerson guilty of assaulting a civilian contractor as she slept at his home on the Aviano Air Base In Italy. Franklin also dismissed Wilkerson's sentence: one year in the brig and dismissal from the Air Force.

    Gillibrand's bill seeks bar military commanders from setting aside guilty findings.

    "Hopefully, we have reached the tipping point," Parrish said. "It is ultimately up to the military leadership. If they decide that this epidemic and all of the recent scandals is a problem that should be solved, reform can happen and happen relatively quickly.

    "At least until now, the military has treated the issue of sexual assault and rape in the military as a public relations problem," she added. "There are some recent signs that some in the leadership realize that it is a real crisis: a crisis that, for the military, is debilitating."

    Related:

    • Air Force's sex-abuse prevention honcho charged with sexual battery
    • Army sergeant assigned to sex-abuse prevention being investigated for pimping, sexual assault
    • Obama: 'No tolerance' for military sexual assault
    • 'Every American should be outraged:' Military sees sharp increase in sex assault cases

    459 comments

    Men should never be in charge of laws dealing with women and sex. They can't handle it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, military, congress, pentagon, sexual-assault, chuck-hagel, department-of-defense, u-s-senate, kirsten-gillibrand, chain-of-command, aviano, rape-in-the-military
  • 14
    May
    2013
    10:00pm, EDT

    Army sergeant assigned to sex-abuse prevention being investigated for pimping, sexual assault

    Investigators in Fort Hood, Texas, are looking into allegations that an Army sergeant sexually assaulted three female soldiers and forced one into prostitution. This is only the latest in a string of military sexual assault scandals that has lawmakers demanding answers. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    By Courtney Kube and Jeff Black, NBC News

    Just a week after an Air Force lieutenant colonel working in its sexual-assault prevention office was arrested and accused of sexual battery, a second U.S. service member assigned to a military sexual assault program is being investigated for various forms of sexual misconduct, officials revealed Tuesday.

    A U.S. Army sergeant first class, assigned to III Corps at Fort Hood, Texas, is now under investigation for pandering — a prostitution solicitation charge — abusive sexual contact, assault and maltreatment of subordinates, the Pentagon said.

    A Defense Department source told NBC News the publicly unidentified soldier allegedly forced at least one subordinate soldier into prostitution and sexually assaulted two others.

    This soldier was assigned as an equal opportunity advisor and Sexual Harassment/Assault Response and Prevention program coordinator with one of the III Corps' subordinate battalions when the allegations came to light.

    He has been suspended from his duties pending an investigation.

    Since the soldier has not been charged and the Army has not released his identity. Special agents from the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command are conducting an investigation.

    Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel was informed about the allegations against the Fort Hood soldier on Tuesday, said George Little, Pentagon spokesman.

    Lieutenant Colonel Jeff Krusinski, who is the Air Force's chief of sexual assault prevention, was arrested early Sunday morning for allegedly drunkenly sexually assaulting a woman in a parking lot. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    “I cannot convey strongly enough his frustration, anger, and disappointment over these troubling allegations and the breakdown in discipline and standards they imply,” Little said.

    Hagel has directed Army Secretary McHugh to fully and rapidly investigate the case “to discover the extent of these allegations, and to ensure that all of those who might be involved are dealt with appropriate,” Little said in a statement.

    In addition, Hagel ordered all branches of the military to re-train, re-credential, and re-screen all sexual assault prevention and response officers as well as military recruiters. 

    “Sexual assault is a crime and will be treated as such,” Little said. “The safety, integrity, and well-being of every service member and the success of our mission hang in the balance.”

    Calling the latest investigation "disturbing," U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., said she will unveil legislation Thursday to reform the military justice system in the prosecution of sexual-assault crimes to remove "chain of command influence." Senior commanders now have the ability to overturn guilty verdicts in sexual assault cases.

    "To say this report is disturbing would be a gross understatement," Gillibrand said. "For the second time in a week we are seeing someone who is supposed to be preventing sexual assault being investigated for committing that very act."

    The latest report comes after a string of bad news regarding the military's effort to staunch sexual assaults in its ranks.

    On Monday, May 6th, the Air Force officer in charge of its sexual-assault program, Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski, was arrested in an Arlington, Va. parking lot for allegedly groping a woman.

    Police said the 41-year-old officer grabbed a woman's breasts and buttocks just after midnight. She managed to fight off her assailant.  

    Krusinksi was charged with sexual battery. The Air Force removed him from his position pending an investigation.

    On Tuesday, the Pentagon released its annual report from the DoD's Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office, which find a spike in sexual assaults.

    According to the report, 3,374 incidents of "unwanted sexual contact" occurred within all branches of the Armed Forces in the 2012 fiscal year. That is a 6 percent increase from the previous year, when there were 3,192 reports.

    The results of an anonymous survey, however, showed that an alarming 26,000 respondents said they had been sexually assaulted in the past year, compared to 19,000 respondents in last year's survey. 

    President Barack Obama said last week he has “no tolerance” for sexual assault in the military. He made the comments in the wake of a new Pentagon report showing the instances of such crimes have spiked since 2010.

    The bottom line is: I have no tolerance for this,” Obama said. “‘I expect consequences,” Obama added. “So I don’t just want more speeches or awareness programs or training, but ultimately folks look the other way. If we find out somebody’s engaging in this, they’ve got to be held accountable – prosecuted, stripped of their positions, court martialed, fired, dishonorably discharged. Period.”

    Related:

    Air Force's sex-abuse prevention honcho charged with sexual battery

    Obama: 'No tolerance' for military sexual assault

    'Every American should be outraged:' Military sees sharp increase in sex assault cases

     

     

    231 comments

    There will be no further investigation because its extremely embarrassing, and this will be brushed under the rug. The military laughs at sexual assault because they think it's normal for their guys to act this way.

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    Explore related topics: crime, military, army, air-force, sexual-assault, jeff-krusinski
  • 9
    May
    2013
    6:00pm, EDT

    Judge sets trial date for Air Force sexual assault honcho

    By Joe Bohannon and Becky Bratu, NBC News

    The trial for the Air Force official who was charged with sexual battery over the weekend will start on July 18, an Arlington District Court judge announced Thursday.

    Lt. Col. Jeffrey Krusinski, 41, maintained a stoic facial expression throughout his brief arraignment. He did not speak, except briefly to acknowledge that he understood his charge of sexual battery.

    Arlington County PD

    Booking photo of Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski

    Sheryl Shane, Krusinski's lawyer, pushed for a September trial date but the judge denied the request.

    Krusinski was arrested Sunday and charged with sexual battery for allegedly grabbing a woman by the breasts and buttocks in a parking lot not far from the Pentagon. He was drunk, according to the police report.

    The woman fought him off, scratching his face. 

    Krusinski ran the U.S. Air Force Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office. He had held this post since February.

    The misdemeanor charge carries a maximum penalty of 12 months in prison and a $2,500 fine.

    45 comments

    He is toast and will be made a well publicized example. His career in the USAF is over. USAF 68-72

    Show more
    Explore related topics: air-force, sexual-assault, krusinski
  • 8
    May
    2013
    11:10am, EDT

    Accused USAF officer will face civilian court

     

    By Tabassum Zakaria and Susan Cornwell, Reuters

    The case of a U.S. Air Force official who headed a sexual-assault prevention unit and was arrested for allegedly groping a woman will be handled in civilian court despite the military's request for jurisdiction, a prosecutor said on Tuesday. 

    Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey Krusinski, 41, was arrested on Sunday and charged with sexual battery for allegedly grabbing a woman by the breasts and buttocks in a parking lot not far from the Pentagon. The police report said the victim fought off a drunken male as he tried to touch her again. 

    Arlington County PD

    Booking photo of Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski

    Theo Stamos, prosecutor for Arlington County, Virginia, said the military had requested jurisdiction of the case, but the county intended to keep it.

    "Since this happened in a civilian setting, not military, it didn't make any sense to me that the military would prosecute this," she said in a phone interview. "We are perfectly capable of going forward."

    Krusinski will be arraigned on Thursday, when he can enter a plea on a misdemeanor charge of sexual battery, which carries a penalty of up to 12 months in jail and a fine of up to $2,500.

    It could not be determined whether Krusinski has obtained a lawyer, and Krusinski could not be reached for comment.

    The arrest came as the U.S. military is under increased pressure to deal with the issue of sexual assault. 

    A new Pentagon report released on Tuesday said the reported cases of sexual assault rose to 3,374 in 2012 from 3,192 the previous year, but the Pentagon estimates that actual cases are considerably higher. Estimated cases of unwanted sexual contact in 2012 were 26,000, compared with 19,000 in 2011. 

    Krusinski, as chief of the Air Force sexual assault prevention and response branch, headed an office of about five people that oversaw education programs and training and helped draft policy, Lieutenant Colonel Laurel Tingley, an Air Force spokeswoman, said. 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    58 comments

    tens of thousands of such cases each year in the military...horrendous.

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    Explore related topics: pentagon, air-force, sexual-assault
  • 7
    May
    2013
    4:20pm, EDT

    'Every American should be outraged:' Military sees sharp increase in sex assault cases

    Jeremiah Arbogast

    Jeremiah Arbogast, 32, a retired Lance Corporal in the Marine Corps, lives in West Virginia with his wife and 11-year-old daughter. Arbogast was sexually assaulted while serving between 1998 and 2006, and said the idea that sexual assaults may have increased dramatically in the past year "totally disgusts me."

    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News contributor

    Despite efforts to create a "military culture free of sexual assault," the Department of Defense announced Tuesday that the number of cases increased sharply in the last year, a trend that critics pointed to as proof that more aggressive measures are needed to end the epidemic. 

    The annual report, released by the DoD's Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office, found that 3,374 incidents of "unwanted sexual contact" occurred within all branches of the Armed Forces in the 2012 fiscal year. That is a 6 percent increase from the previous year, when there were 3,192 reports.

    The results of an anonymous survey, however, present a much more alarming picture: 26,000 respondents said they had been sexually assaulted in the past year, compared to 19,000 respondents in last year's survey. 

    Rep. Niki Tsongas, D-Mass., was briefed by Pentagon officials on the report earlier today and told NBC News that the increase appears to represent an actual rise in the number of assaults rather than a growing willingness to report cases anonymously. 

    The figures were released a day after the announcement that Air Force Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski had been removed from his position as branch chief for the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office after being charged with sexual battery. A drunken Krusinski allegedly approached the woman in a parking lot in Arlington, Va., and grabbed her breasts and buttocks, according to a police report.

    Tsongas said she was "astonished and outraged" upon hearing of Krusinski's arrest. 

    The report released Tuesday, Tsongas said, indicated that though "we've put many more tools in the toolbox ... it's clear to me there's much more work to be done" in changing the military's culture with regard to sexual assault. 


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    "Every American should be outraged by the disturbing numbers from this year's Defense Department sexual assault report," Anu Bhagwati, executive director of the Washington, D.C., advocacy organization Service Women's Action Network, said in a statement to NBC News.

    Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel condemned the trend in the report, calling sexual assault a "crime that is incompatible with military service." 

    'They're just not getting it'
    President Barack Obama, who spoke with Hagel on Tuesday, said he has "no tolerance" for sexual assault in the military.

    "I expect consequences," Obama added. "So I don’t just want more speeches or awareness programs or training, but ultimately folks look the other way. If we find out somebody’s engaging in this, they’ve got to be held accountable — prosecuted, stripped of their positions, court martialed, fired, dishonorably discharged. Period."

    Jeremiah Arbogast, 32, a retired Lance Corporal in the Marine Corps who was sexually assaulted while serving between 1998 and 2006, was ecstatic that the president spoke so forcefully. 

    The idea that sexual assaults may have increased dramatically in the past year "totally disgusts me," he said. “I think it’s very appalling that they’re just not getting it.” 

    Jeremiah Arbogast

    "I love the Marine Corps and military with all my heart, but I want to rid the military of these sick individuals," Jeremiah Arbogast told NBC News.

    Arbogast, who has advocated for legislation that would change the way the military handles sexual assaults, was drugged and attacked by a staff sergeant in 2000. He experienced post-traumatic stress after the assault, and in 2009, attempted suicide with a firearm. The gunshot wound left him a paraplegic. 

    “I was going to make a career out of the Marine Corps and I didn’t think this was going to happen to me,” said Arbogast. “I love the Marine Corps and military with all my heart, but I want to rid the military of these sick individuals.” 

    Arbogast believes that training materials like books, brochures and videos won’t fix a problem that is deeply rooted in both unjust policies and a dysfunctional culture. 

    For example, commanders must be stripped of their ability to reverse a guilty verdict in a sexual assault case, he said. The Air Force was again the subject of controversy recently when Lt. Gen. Craig Franklin overturned the conviction of an F-16 pilot, Lt. Col. James Wilkerson, after he’d been found guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a civilian contractor. 

    “As a survivor, it makes you feel that regardless of what happens to you, that there is no justice, that your voice is never heard,” Arbogast said of overturned convictions. 

    'Chilling effect'
    Rep. Tsongas, who also supports a revision of the rule known as Article 60, said that Secretary Hagel has shown a willingness to modify it, and that she is looking at ways to put such changes into law. 

    There are a number of legislative proposals to address perceived problems with how the military investigates and prosecutes sexual assault cases. On Tuesday, Sens. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) introduced the Combating Military Sexual Assault Act of 2013, which calls for providing victims with a military lawyer and improving the ability of the DoD’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (SAPR) Office to collect and track statistics on the number of cases and prosecutions, among other measures. 

    While 3,374 incidents were reported in the last fiscal year, some accused assailants were not under the military’s legal authority or allegations against them were found to be “false” or “baseless.” Some victims also requested that their cases not be investigated. Of the 1,714 offenders that could be investigated, according to the Pentagon report, commanders had enough evidence to punish 66 percent of them, an increase from 57 percent in the 2009 fiscal year. 

    Tsongas said that she was particularly concerned about the nearly two-thirds of victims who reported professional or administrative retaliation once they stepped forward with an accusation. “That’s an alarming number,” she said. “You can just guess the chilling effect it has on those thinking of coming forward.”

    Arbogast, who lives in Fort Ashby, W.V. with his wife and 11-year-old daughter, remains involved with the military as an athlete in wounded warrior sporting events. He is hopeful that the outrage about the new figures will spark change within the military. 

    “If I had the opportunity to travel to every base to speak weekly, I would do it just to flush these people out of the system,” he said. “It’s an important issue and I think people need to take it seriously, because if they don’t the numbers will keep rising.”

    Related:

    • Convicted of sex assault — then cleared — fighter pilot sparks protest at Tucson base
    • Defense Secretary Hagel demands rape reform in military
    • Accuser in Air Force sexual assault case 'frustrated' at overturned verdict
    • Army employs video game to help curb sex assaults; critics call it 'affront'

    62 comments

    This is absolutely outrageous and offensive. As a USMC Vietnam vet, I am offended that this culture has been allowed to persist.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, sexual-assault, chuck-hagel, department-of-defense, rebecca-ruiz, military-sexual-trauma
  • 6
    May
    2013
    7:43pm, EDT

    Pentagon's annual report on sexual assault shows alarming rise

     

    By Courtney Kube and Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News

    On Tuesday, the Pentagon will release the annual report on sexual assaults in the military, which shows some startling numbers.

    While the report will show that the number of reported assaults in fiscal year 2012 rose only 6 percent to 3,374 — up from 3,192 a year before — the number of people who made an anonymous claim that they were sexually assaulted but never reported the attack skyrocketed from 19,000 in FY11 to 26,000 in FY12.

    Members of Congress will be briefed on the report early tomorrow afternoon, and then Major General Gary Patton, the Director of the DoD Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office (SAPRO), will brief the media.

    Embarrassingly, the report is being made public just a day after it was revealed that the Air Force's sexual-abuse prevention chief has himself been charged with sexual assault.
     

    232 comments

    I am a 25-year female retired veteran of the Air Force. And it's "not the military" that is at fault here. It's the recruits that are joining the military. Unfortunately I see more and more boys and young men being brought up to not respect women.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, pentagon, sexual-assault
  • Updated
    7
    May
    2013
    11:17am, EDT

    Air Force's sex-abuse prevention honcho charged with sexual battery

    Lieutenant Colonel Jeff Krusinski, who is the Air Force's chief of sexual assault prevention, was arrested early Sunday morning for allegedly drunkenly sexually assaulting a woman in a parking lot. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    By Jim Miklaszewski, Courtney Kube and Tracy Connor, NBC News

    The Air Force official in charge of its sexual-assault prevention program was arrested for groping, authorities said Monday.

    Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski, 41, was removed from his position as head of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office pending an investigation, the Air Force said.

    The incident happened just after midnight Sunday when a drunken Krusinski allegedly approached the woman in a parking lot in Arlington, Va., and grabbed her breasts and buttocks, according to a police report.

    Police said the woman fought off her assailant and scratches can be seen on Krusinski’s face in his mug shot. He was charged with sexual battery.

    The charges are "deeply troubling," Air Force Chief of Staff General Mark Welsh said Tuesday. The Air Force has requested jurisdiction in the case, which is standard practice.

    Krusinski didn't show up for work Monday and would not talk to colleagues about the incident, a senior defense official said.

    Arlington County PD

    Mug shot of Air Force Lt. Col. Jeff Krusinski, who headed the service's sexual-abuse prevention office until he was arrested for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman in Virginia over the weekend.

    "He has been removed," Lt. Col. Laurel Tingley said of Krusinski, who had been in charge of the sexual-assault unit for about two months.

    His arrest comes as the U.S. military grapples with sexual assault in its ranks. The Air Force recently came under fire when a commander reversed a guilty verdict in a sexual assault case.

    Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel expressed his "outrage and disgust" to Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley Monday night after learning about the allegations against Krusinski. Hagel "emphasized that this matter will be dealt with swiftly and decisively," a Pentagon statement said.

    "This is absolutely infuriating," said Greg Jacob, policy director at the Service Women's Action Network. "Clearly the business-as-usual manner in which the military handles sexual assault cases has led to a climate where the very officers in charge of preventing this criminal activity feel that sexual assault is acceptable behavior.

    "The military has proven time and again that the current system of prosecuting these cases is broken," he said.

    The Pentagon will release its annual report on sexual assaults in the military on Tuesday afternoon, which shows an increase in reported assaults in fiscal year 2012 — up from 3,192 a year before. Furthermore, the number of people who made an anonymous claim that they were sexually assaulted but never reported the attack skyrocketed from 19,000 in FY11 to 26,000 in FY12.

    U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., a member of the Armed Services Committee, said the allegations were "extremely disturbing."

    "It is clear that the status quo regarding sexual assaults in the military is simply unacceptable. Next week I am going to take this issue head on by introducing a set of common sense reforms," she said in a statement.

    "We have to reform how the military handles sexual assault cases and take on the culture that perpetuates this kind of behavior.”

    NBC News' Michael Isikoff contributed to this report

    This story was originally published on Mon May 6, 2013 4:45 PM EDT

    763 comments

    Looks like he got the worst of it!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, military, air-force, sexual-assault, updated, jeff-krusinski
  • 10
    Apr
    2013
    11:24am, EDT

    Army employs video game to help curb sex assaults; critics call it 'affront'

    Courtesy WILL Interactive

    A screen grab from "Team-Bound," the interactive video game used by the Army to educate soldiers about sexual assault.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    The Army is using an interactive video game to train soldiers how to prevent sexual assaults in the ranks, and the technology has proven so popular, the branch just ordered a sequel, according to a spokesman for the company behind the video.

    But advocates for military-rape survivors vilify the video — and the philosophy behind it — as “a waste of taxpayer dollars,” an “affront to victims of sexual assault” and a tool “of limited value.”

    Titled “Team-Bound,” the program streams laptop-generated scenarios, allowing users to assume the roles of a male or female specialist who witness on-base sexual harassments and eventually — at a bar favored by soldiers — the warning signs of an alcohol-induced date rape. Players must choose multiple responses throughout the episodes then watch the consequences of either intervening or ignoring the observed behaviors.


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    If the video’s users pick passive reactions, an intoxicated female private is eventually raped in an Army barracks after leaving the bar with an aggressive, male private. In the video, the victim is shown ultimately reporting the attack then opting to leave the service, prompting an Army official to tell viewers: “A life damaged, a career ended, a unit falling apart. But it didn’t have to be this way. All you had to do was stand up and be strong.”


    Word of the Army's requested sequel — currently in production and scheduled to film this summer — follows Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel’s decision on Monday to crack down on generals who now possess the power to overturn sex-assault sentences rendered by military juries.

    Courtesy WILL Interactive

    Screen grab from "Team-Bound" video game.

    A spokeswoman for the Army’s Sexual Harassment/Assault Response Prevention (SHARP) Program did not immediately respond to emailed questions about the cost, content or implementation of "Team-Bound" or its sequel.

    But a spokesman for WILL Interactive, the Maryland company behind both videos, said: “As part of its overall program to address and eliminate sexual assault, the military commissioned WILL Interactive to develop ‘interactive video simulations’ that combine behavior modification role-playing with a video game element.”

    In 2010, the Army “engaged” WILL Interactive to produce “Team-Bound,” said Caleb Barnhart, an account executive with New York-based BLJ Worldwide, an outside communications firm employed WILL Interactive.

    “The program was so well received by service members and Army administrators that they asked WILL to develop a sequel,” Barnhart said.

    'Limited value'
    The original episodes were written after focus groups consisting of Army members suggested several real-life scenarios, said Marc Smrikarov, a vice president of BLJ Worldwide.

    In one scene, five Army buddies wearing civilian clothes arrive together at a nightclub where several female soldiers are relaxing, also wearing casual outfits. A narrator says: “Loud music, cold beer, hot girls, game on.” The actors then portray various behaviors, each triggered by users’ responses. Information about the Army’s sexual harassment policies, definitions, and how to prevent such behavior — and, ultimately, stop a rape — is offered throughout that segment and others.

    Courtesy WILL Interactive

    Screen grab from "Team-Bound" video game.

    But the program is being slammed by some experts on the topic. 

    “For decades, leaders in our military have thought that they can end the epidemic of sexual assault in the military simply through training programs, like the ‘Ask Her When She’s Sober’ campaign,” said Nancy Parrish, president of Protect Our Defenders, an advocacy group for military sex-assault victims. “This video game is another example of that line of thinking. Not only is it a waste of taxpayer dollars, it is affront to victims of sexual assault.

    “Rape and sexual assault in the military is often about the abuse of power. It is a violent crime and should be treated as such. According to the DOD’s own statistics, the majority of these crimes are committed by an individual of higher rank,” Parrish said. The video “continues to portray rape and sexual assault as a misunderstanding of a social situation — (as with) ‘Ask Her When She's Sober’ — and places the emphasis on the victim and bystanders to intervene in an assault, instead of placing the responsibility squarely on the perpetrator.”

    A leader of the Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN) — which seeks to curb sexual discrimination, harassment and assault inside the military — similarly criticized “Team-Bound” as an example of the Army trying to teach its way out of the sexual-assault problem rather than focusing on disciplining and removing offenders. 

    “My take is that it’s of limited value to focus on behavioral aspects (without) addressing the role of institutional deterrents,” said Rachel Natelson, the legal and programs director at SWAN. “Outside of the military, companies can’t simply ‘train’ their employees not to commit offenses — they also have to correct offenses once they occur or they’ll be held liable under the law.”

    Related:

    • Defense Secretary Hagel demands rape reform in military
    • Guidelines protect sex assault victims seeking security clearance
    • Training aims to improve how military sexual assaults are investigated
    • Senate panel members suggest overhaul of military justice system 
    • Accuser in Air Force sexual assault case 'frustrated' at overturned verdict
    • Civil Rights Commission urged to order audit of military sex-assault cases

     

    85 comments

    Having left military service 10 years ago I cannot say what state the Army's training is in today, but I know that during my service we had sensitivity and preventive training for just about anything you could think of, and guess what, it was not effective. You simply cannot change human nature, and …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, rape, army, pentagon, sexual-assault, video-game, featired, protect-our-defenders, service-womens-action-network, sex-assault-in-the-military
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