As one might expect, considering military discipline and an institutional
sense of order, crime is less prevalent in the U.S. military than in most
major American cities.
The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) is the criminal system of justice
applicable to all members of the U.S. military on active duty worldwide. When you
raise your hand and volunteer to serve in uniform in defense of the country, you
voluntarily relinquish some of your rights and civil liberties.
"Military justice is to justice what military music is to music," Groucho
Marx once quipped.
Yet for all that, a small group of military people commit theft, rape, murder
and other crimes one associates more with the civilian sector.
A four-person commission led by former Defense Secretary James R.
Schlesinger, released their report on the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse case. The
report lays the blame squarely on the individual soldiers that committed "acts
of brutality and purposeless sadism."
The soldiers were not acting on approved orders or policies, the report said.
Schlesinger added that it was a kind of "Animal House" on the night shift. The
report also stated that there was also a serious lack of leadership.
"Commanders are responsible for all their units do or fail to do, and they
should be held accountable for their action or inaction," the report
concluded.
The Army’s CID investigation continues and I think we’ll see more court
marshals of soldiers and some resignations up the chain of command.
I’ve been following other military crime stories as well.
A senior chief
petty officer deeply in dept as a result of two bad marriages, embezzled $56,000
from the Chief’s Mess (meal) fund aboard the amphibious assault ship
Bataan. In another case, an award-winning Navy female first class petty
officer was arrested for participating in a drug ring that manufactured and
distributed methamphetamine in Hawaii.
Also, there is the case of a senior Defense Department contracting
officer and three others who were indicted for corruption in what federal
prosecutors say was a scam to award $11 million in contracts to a firm they
secretly held financial interests in.
And then there is the crime of espionage. The FBI is conducting an
investigation of a Pentagon official who may have leaked intelligence on Iran
to Israel, much like the case of Jonathan Pollard, a Navy employee who spied for
the Israelis some years ago and is currently incarcerated in federal prison.
The breaking news, as I write this, is the FBI probe may be broader than the
Iran leak. The FBI is said to also be looking into whether Pentagon officials
leaked classified information to an Iraqi exile group, who in turn may have
passed it on to Iran.
Less known, but perhaps a more serious and dangerous case of espionage,
involves a terrorist’s confiscated computer. Investigators are looking into the
e-mail exchanges between a suspected terrorist arrested in London and a U.S.
sailor stationed aboard a ship attached to a carrier battle group that was on
patrol in the Strait of Hormuz.
Was this a case of espionage? Did the sailor
give information to the terrorists that would aid them in an act of terrorism
against Navy ships? I’ll be following this case closely.
My life-long interest in the military stems from my late father, Edward M. Davis, a tough old Navy chief
who served as one of the first members of the Underwater Demolition Teams (UDT)
in WWII. The UDT frogmen were the forerunners of today’s Navy SEALs. My father
ran our house like a Navy command and he instilled in his children a sense of duty, honor and
respect for the military.
In a sense, my beginnings in both journalism and government began at the Philadelphia Naval Yard. As a teenager in the mid-1960s, I sold newspapers at the Navy Yard, which
lay at the foot of South Philadelphia. Riding in the open back of the newspaper
truck, I would pass the fleet of moored ships in the Delaware River and dream of
one day joining the Navy, seeing the world and becoming a writer.
I enlisted in the Navy at 17 and served on the aircraft carrier the USS
Kitty Hawk (CVA 63) during the
Vietnam War. I later spent another two years on a Navy tugboat, the USS
Saugus (YTB 780) at the nuclear submarine base, called Site One, in Holy Loch, Scotland.
After leaving the Navy, I did security
work as a Defense Department civilian employee for many years. And as a writer, I’ve gone on to
cover a good number of stories about the military.
In my long association with the military, I’ve come to know many dedicated
and honest men and women who sacrifice personal comforts and freedom to defend
our country. I’ve also come across a few self-serving and stupid officers, a few
lazy and idiotic managers, and a few crooked soldiers, sailors and
civilians.
The Defense Department is the largest company in the world. The Defense
Department employs 1.4 million active duty military members, 1.2 million
National Guard and military reserve members, and 654,000 civilians, the vast
majority of whom are honorably serving the country.
I think it’s a crime that a few greedy and stupid individuals are besmirching
the military at a time when soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines are in the
forefront of the American-led war on terrorism.
Note: The above
Crime Beat column originally appeared in the
Orchard Press Online Mystery Magazine in 2004.
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