Police: Friddle Faces 13 Counts Of Sexual Assault

KITV.com

Police Charge Man In Infant Abuse Case

Police: Friddle Faces 13 Counts Of Sexual Assault

POSTED: 7:37 pm HST March 14, 2008
UPDATED: 8:45 pm HST March 14, 2008

HONOLULU — A man police accused of raping an infant girl was taken into custody Friday night and charged with the crime, police said.

Police charged Danny Franklin Friddle, 30, with 13 counts of sexual assault and child abuse on a girl under the age of 2.

They arrested him on Wednesday following an investigation that allegedly included a videotape of the assault.

Friddle was charged with eight counts of first-degree sexual assault, three counts of third-degree sexual assault and two counts of promoting child abuse.

Honolulu Police Department detectives arrested Friddle after they said he was connected to a videotape showing a man assaulting a young girl.

Detectives notified the mother after reviewing the tape and said the abuse might have started when the girl was a newborn.

No one appeared to be home Friday at the Kapolei-area residence where Friddle lived for more than a year and where he was arrested on Wednesday.

His car remained parked outside.

Neighbors said they didn’t know much about him because he usually worked late hours and didn’t socialize much, but they said they were shocked after learning of his arrest.

“The first thing I wanted to do was throw up. Second, was my daughter grows up in this neighborhood. A lot of children that I know, that I see, that I care about are growing up in this neighborhood,” neighbor Chezare Amakalea said.

Friddle became a Schofield soldier after moving from North Carolina.

A person who knows him said Friddle went AWOL after getting into a car accident and spent five months in the brigade. He tried to get reinstated in the Army, but was denied, the person said.

Friddle has been working as a security guard at Kam Four housing.

Public records show he was divorced from a woman in North Carolina and has two young boys.

He has several misdemeanors in that state, but nothing that would indicate a history of sexual abuse, officials said.

He and his second wife divorced in September 2007 and have a child.

Friddle is being held on a $100,000 bond.
Source: http://www.kitv.com/print/15602352/detail.html

Former Schofield Soldier Accused of Sexually Assaulting Baby

Security Guard Accused of Sexually Assaulting Baby

Posted: Mar 13, 2008 7:28 PM

Featured Videos

Exclusive Video: Security Guard Accused of Sexually Assaulting Baby

By Minna Sugimoto

HONOLULU (KHNL) — His job is to protect people. But now, an Oahu security officer is accused of sexually assaulting a baby girl.

People who know Danny Friddle say they’re disturbed by the allegations. Not only is he accused of molesting an infant, police say the security guard committed the sexual acts while a video camera was rolling.

“Are you Danny?” this reporter asked.

“Yeah,” Friddle replied.

“Hey, I’m Minna Sugimoto. We’re with Channel 8 News,” this reporter said.

KHNL News 8 confronts 30-year-old Danny Friddle just prior to his arrest Wednesday.

“There was a tape that was located,” this reporter told the suspect. “And apparently, there was an allegation that the tape contained some disturbing material.”

A woman told police she came across a bag at a bus stop at Kalihi Valley Homes Monday. She says inside, she found the security guard’s work ID and a video of him performing sexual acts on an infant girl.

“Do you know anything about that?” this reporter asked Friddle.

“No, uh, nothing,” the suspect replied. “I’m really, I just woke up. I’ve been up all night.”

Friddle is a supervisor at Kalihi-based Alii Security, which declined comment Thursday.

Lisa Asano says she’s been his girlfriend for the past year and a half.

“He’s a hard-working, good guy who has the best of intentions,” Asano said. “He’s a really sweet guy, but there’s one part of him that needs help.”

“Do you know that police are investigating it?” this reporter asked the suspect. “Do you have a comment about it?”

“No,” Friddle replied as he walked away.

Sources say Friddle’s bag was reported stolen Sunday, the day before the witness found it at the bus stop.

Police are not releasing any other details at this time, but say formal charges are expected to be filed Friday.

Source: http://www.khnl.com/global/story.asp?S=8015119

Foreign Occupations

Here’s an article from Foreign Policy in Focus with many links to other articles covering different aspects of the U.S. Empire including military bases and missile defenses, economic crises and interventions in the affairs of other countries.

Source: www.fpif.org

World Beat
by JOHN FEFFER | Monday, February 25, 2008
Vol. 3, No. 8

Foreign Occupation

Imagine a foreign military base in the United States.

The European Union has developed an independent army. It maintains a strategic interest in its former colonies in the Caribbean. The dollar is weak, and the euro is strong. In exchange for canceling some of the U.S. debt owed to European countries, the EU says, “Hey, how about a spot of land on your southern coast where we can help ensure the security of the region?” The United States gives a Henny Youngman response: “Take Miami. Please.”

The U.S. public is concerned. Foreign soldiers on U.S. soil? That hasn’t happened since 1812, when the Brits burned down the White House. The U.S. government, desperate for a little debt relief, reassures the population: “They’re allies. You don’t have to worry about them. There’s been a spike of terrorist activity down there in the islands, and our European friends will be helping us defend you against the bad guys.” So the Europeans buy some cheap real estate in
downtown Miami and set up shop.

The problems with this little debt-for-bases swap emerge rather quickly. Our “allies” begin behaving badly. First it’s just a couple fistfights with the locals. Then one of the EU soldiers is accused of raping a young woman. Shortly after that, an EU armored personnel carrier, on a narrow road at dusk, strikes and kills a University of Miami sophomore on his bike. The controversy over these crimes escalates when, as per the status of forces agreement, the Miami authorities hand over the suspects to the EU, which is concerned about the rather barbaric U.S. habit of executing people whether they’re guilty or innocent. Meanwhile, Miami civic groups begin accusing the EU military officials of burying toxic chemicals on base property and releasing noxious fumes into the atmosphere. People living near the compound complain about the noise from the artillery range. Then there’s the grower whose entire crop of oranges is destroyed when an EU jet fighter drops a bomb that completely misses the testing ground.

Sound implausible? That kind of stuff couldn’t happen between allies. Except that it does. And you could get a bushel of similar stories from the people of South Korea, Okinawa, the Philippines, Diego Garcia, Guam, Cuba, Djibouti, and all the other places where the United States maintains one of its 700-plus military bases around the world. Until recently, South Korea hosted a huge military base in downtown Seoul. Over the course of its military presence on the Japanese island of Okinawa, U.S. service personnel have attacked, kidnapped, abused, gang-raped or murdered over 400 women (just this month a staff sergeant was arrested and charged with raping a 14-year-old girl in Okinawa). Back in the 1990s, the U.S. Army estimated that it would cost $3 billion to clean up just the soil and groundwater pollution that the bases have caused abroad. And the United States has argued that these bases are necessary to protect not only U.S. interests but also the local people.

This week at FPIF, we debut our new strategic focus on the global U.S. military footprint – and how to shrink it. We start with Iraq, where the footprint is off the charts. As FPIF contributor Tom Engelhardt of TomDispatch.com explains in The Million Year War, the Bush administration has put down roots in the country. “This administration has already built its state-of-the-art mega-bases in Iraq as well as a mega-embassy, the largest on the planet,”
Engelhardt writes. “Yet in April 2003, the month Baghdad fell to American forces, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld first denied that the United States was seeking ‘permanent’ bases in Iraq. Ever since then, administration officials have consistently denied that those increasingly permanent-looking mega-bases were ‘permanent.'” The Bush administration is temporary but alas, the Iraq bases are looking very suspiciously permanent.

FPIF contributor Adil Shamoo provides two explanations for Bush’s strategy of an “enduring presence” in Iraq. “One is to intimidate future Iraqi governments from daring to break the relationship with the only superpower that can threaten their very existence,” he writes in The Enduring Trap in Iraq. “The second is to intimidate anyone who wins the U.S. presidential election with the accusation of ‘cutting and running’ in Iraq.”

In some parts of the world, the United States is reducing, retrenching, repositioning. But not Africa. With the new Africa Command – AFRICOM – the United States is aiming for full continental dominance. “The Pentagon claims that AFRICOM is all about integrating coordination and ‘building partner capacity,'” write FPIF contributors Daniel Volman and Beth Tuckey in Militarizing Africa (Again). “But the new structure is really about securing oil resources, countering terrorism, and rolling back Chinese influence. Given AFRICOM’s emphasis on defense over diplomacy, resistance to the initiative is possible not only from civic movements but even the U.S. State Department.”

The expansion of U.S. basing extends to Europe as well. The United States has been twisting arms in the “new” Europe – in Rummyspeak – to install 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar military base in the Czech Republic. But according to FPIF contributors Joanne Landy and Thomas Harrison, it’s far from a done deal. Sixty percent of Poles and 70% of Czechs are opposed to the bases. “Resistance in Europe and elsewhere has received reinforcement from the U.S. Congress, which has hesitated to move forward with the bases,” they write in Pushing Missile Defense in Europe. “In May 2007, the Senate Armed Services Committee cut $85 million from the 2008 Defense Authorization act intended for site activation and construction work on the missile installation in Poland and radar site in the Czech Republic. The Senate committee action followed a House vote earlier in May to cut the president’s request for the anti-missile system by $160 million.”

This Wednesday, February 27, if you’re in the Washington, DC area, please join us for a protest we’re cosponsoring with the Campaign for Peace and Democracy against the proposed U.S. base in the Czech Republic. We’ll be meeting at 12:30 in front of the White House, just across from Lafayette Park. Bring your lunch, your signs, and your friends.

Welcome President Bush!

FPIF continued its coverage of President George W. Bush’s visit to Africa last week. In his sardonic contribution Welcome President Bush!, FPIF contributor Tajudeen Abdulraheem explains the difficulties of rolling out the red carpet. “The hassles of hosting a U.S. president are bad enough,” he writes. “His people take over your whole country and make our normally inefficient states go into overdrive and our egregious first ladies and their husbands go into overkill to show their hospitality.”

But the carpet is red for other reasons. As FPIF contributors Bahati Ntama Jacques and Beth Tuckey explain, the legacy that the U.S. president is leaving in Africa is a bloody one. “Bush knows that Rwanda’s involvement in the armed conflict in the DRC delays peace in eastern Congo, but he continues to authorize military aid to Rwanda,” they write in Rwanda and the War on Terror. “In 2007, the United States armed and trained Rwandan soldiers with $7.2 million from the U.S. defense program Africa Contingent Operations Training Assistance
(ACOTA) and $260,000 from the International Military and Education (IMET) program.”

The last stop on the trip was Liberia. As FPIF contributor Tim Newman points out in Rejecting Paternalism in Africa?, the Liberian case undercuts the president’s claim that he has boosted development on the continent. “Bush will end his trip by spending a few hours in Liberia,” Newman writes. “There he will try to cast himself in the role of the compassionate conservative who successfully intervened in Liberia’s long civil war, thus heralding in a shining new democracy led by Africa’s first democratically elected female president. In his
February 14 press conference, Bush celebrated increasing private capital flows to sub-Saharan Africa. But the workers supposedly benefiting from foreign private investment in Liberia might have a different perspective.”

A New State?

Kosovo, the predominantly Albanian enclave of Serbia, declared its formal independence last week. FPIF’s Ian Williams and Stephen Zunes both support the right of the Kosovars to self-determination. But they don’t see exactly eye to eye on the issue of recognizing the new state.

In our latest strategic dialogue, Ian Williams observes in A New Kosovo that “recognition of Kosovar independence has started with the United States and most of the European Union. Most Islamic countries
will probably follow suit, along with many non-aligned states. So far Belgrade has blustered and threatened to downgrade relations with the dozens of very important neighbors who will recognize Kosovo. But after the multiple defeats that Miloševic caused for Serbs,fortunately there is little appetite for military action.”

Stephen Zunes, in Kosovo and the Politics of Recognition, argues that the U.S. decision to recognize Kosovo, which President Bush announced during his Africa trip, was perhaps a bit hasty. He points to the potential for pushing Serbian toward right-wing extremism, the prospect of the Albanian minority in Macedonia pushing to join a greater Kosovo, and the encouraging of secessionist movements in the Caucasus. Finally, he notes, “the impact of Kosovo’s independence and recognition by the United States and other Western nations could also seriously worsen U.S.-Russian relations, exacerbating differences that hawks on both sides are warning could evolve into a ‘new Cold War.'”

After its recent elections, Pakistan almost qualifies as a new state. The victory of the opposition in the parliamentary elections may well herald the return of democracy to the ill-fated land. Alas, General Pervez Musharraf shows no signs of stepping aside, not when he still has America on his side. FPIF contributor Najum Mushtaq urges the United States to reconsider. “Washington should have reviewed its ill-directed, one-dimensional Pakistan policy long ago,” he writes in Letting Go of Musharraf. “Instead of persisting with the failed Musharraf option, Washington should put all its weight behind the new parliament, which represents the voice of the Pakistani people.

Breaking the Bank

The financial big boys are freaking out, reports FPIF columnist Walden Bello. George Soros and World Economic Forum host Klaus Schwab are suddenly sounding like the gravediggers of capitalism. “Skyrocketing oil prices, a falling dollar, and collapsing financial markets are the key ingredients in an economic brew that could end up
in more than just an ordinary recession,” Bello writes in Capitalism in an Apocalyptic Mood. “The falling dollar and rising oil prices have been rattling the global economy for some time. But it is the dramatic implosion of financial markets that is driving the financial elite to panic.”

You might think that U.S. politicians, when confronted with an escalating economic crisis, would reach into the biggest pot of money around to help get us out of the pickle. Not so.

President Bush’s treatment of the military budget as a sacred cow is at least consistent with his conduct over the last seven years. But what about the Democrats? As FPIF contributor William Hartung explains in Dems: What about the Military Budget?, “Not only have the major presidential candidates been largely silent on these record expenditures, but they want to increase them. Barack Obama has said we will probably need to ‘bump up’ the military budget in a new administration, and both he and Hillary Clinton have committed themselves to increasing the size of the armed forces by tens of thousands of troops.”

And Now for Something Completely Different

In our second installment of poetry to celebrate the upcoming Split This Rock poetry festival, FPIF contributor Susan Tichy reflects on what we think about when we think about war. Her American Ghazals, named after the Persian poetic form, describe a landscape of pain and fear, and yet in there too is beauty and compassion.

Finally, in the Russian tradition of “laughter through tears,” we present to you the job description for a great new opening: the head of Cuba.

FPIF’s humorist Alec Dubro provides the details: “The nation of Cuba is planning a massive restructuring that may or may not actually happen. Possible outcomes: become Chinese-model, free-market police state; acquire banana republic status; enter United States as a county of Florida; limp along without direction; or make the
transition to social democracy and prosperity. We want you to be part of this momentous change, or possibly stifle it.
Links

John Lindsay-Poland and Nick Morgan, “Overseas Military Bases and the Environment,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/briefs/vol3/v3n15mil.html).

Tom Engelhardt, “The Million Year War,” Foreign Policy In Focus(http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4977); There’s a risk that the United States will never withdraw from Iraq.

Adil Shamoo, “The Enduring Trap in Iraq,” Foreign Policy In Focus(http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5000); The Bush administration wants to place U.S. military troops and bases permanently on Iraqi soil despite strong objections from many Democrats.

Daniel Volman and Beth Tuckey, “Militarizing Africa (Again),” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4997); With the new Africa Command, the United States is increasing its military presence on an energy-rich continent.

Joanne Landy and Thomas Harrison, “Pushing Missile Defense in Europe,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5005); The United States wants to establish bases in Poland and the Czech
Republic – over the objections of the citizens of those countries.

Tajudeen Abdulraheem, “Welcome President Bush!” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5002); Not only examines President Bush’s Africa trip itinerary, country by country, but also why he is visiting the continent in the first place.

Bahati Ntama Jacques and Beth Tuckey, “Rwanda and the War on Terror,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4999); U.S. administrations allow narrowly defined “national interests” – instead
of needs, priorities, and realities in a given country – to dictate foreign assistance. And Rwanda happens to be a perfect example.

Tim Newman, “Rejecting Paternalism in Africa?” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4973); Does President Bush’s view of trade and investment on workers in Africa truly end paternalism?

Ian Williams, “A New Kosovo,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4992); Kosovo has declared its independence from Serbia. But there are still a few obstacles in the path of statehood.

Stephen Zunes, “Kosovo and the Politics of Recognition,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5006); The United States should have thought twice about rushing to recognize the new state of Kosovo.

Najum Mushtaq, “Letting Go of Musharraf,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5004); It’s time for Washington to wake up and smell the elections.

Walden Bello, “Capitalism in an Apocalyptic Mood,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4996); Even the world’s top financiers are beginning to panic.

William Hartung, “Dems: What about the Military Budget?” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5009); The Democratic candidates will debate each other, but not the metastasizing military budget.

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: http://www.splitthisrock.org/

Susan Tichy, “American Ghazals,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5008); What we think about when we think about war.

Alec Dubro, “Job Opening (Cuba),” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5007); Tired of your current job? Want more executive responsibility, good health care benefits, warmer weather? Cuba may want you.

Sergeant routinely abused Iraqis, say soldiers at hearings

Posted on: Monday, February 25, 2008

Sergeant routinely abused Iraqis, say soldiers at hearings

By William Cole
Advertiser Columnist

Back in October, Schofield Barracks soldiers described Spc. Christopher Shore as a peaceful guy, a very funny guy, a good guy, very friendly, an outstanding soldier who didn’t have a propensity for violence.

At his sentencing Wednesday for aggravated assault in the shooting death of an unarmed Iraqi detainee, he wiped away tears in a courtroom at Wheeler Army Airfield.

“I know it’s real easy if you’ve never been in this situation to Monday quarterback and say what the law says,” he said. “You don’t know until you’re there.”

In Iraq, things went terribly wrong for the scouts platoon of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry, the unit to which Shore belonged.

Testimony at both a preliminary hearing in October and Shore’s court-martial last week pointed to routine abuse of Iraqis by a bullying and out-of-control platoon leader, culminating with the shooting in the village of al Saheed outside Kirkuk last June.

Sgt. 1st Class Trey Corrales, 35, that platoon leader, is accused of shooting the unarmed Iraqi multiple times, and then ordering Shore to “finish” him.

Instead of carrying out the order, Shore said he fired two shots next to the detainee’s head in the dirt “to defuse the situation.”

Shore said Corrales had tried to get the Iraqi to take an AK-47 rifle after the raid, and then ordered the man to run.

Confused, the Iraqi, wearing a white tunic, said, “No mister, no mister, not me,” Shore said.

Another soldier testified that as the Iraqi backed up, he saw Corrales raise his rifle, and as the soldier turned away – not wanting to see what came next – he heard a succession of shots.

The Iraqi man was shot five times.

Shortly afterward, knowing what had happened was wrong and with the story spreading fast, several soldiers went to higher command.

Shore, 26, of Winder, Ga., was sentenced to 120 days’ confinement, received a reprimand and was reduced in rank, officials said.

He had gone to court-martial on a charge of third-degree murder – roughly equivalent to a civilian manslaughter charge – but was convicted of aggravated assault.

Corrales, of San Antonio, faces court-martial on April 22. He is charged with premeditated murder, wrongfully soliciting another soldier to shoot the Iraqi, and wrongfully impeding the investigation by having an AK-47 rifle planted near the victim. He faces life in prison without parole if convicted.

Soldiers described a litany of abuse by Corrales against Iraqis, and the fear they felt themselves.

Shore said Corrales once stuck the barrel of his M-4 rifle down an Iraqi’s throat until he gagged.

On another occasion, Corrales took out his knife, pulled out an Iraqi man’s tongue, and threatened to cut it off, Shore said.

Sgt. 1st Class Dennis Bulham said he saw Corrales abuse Iraqis, and punch and kick them.

Spc. Trinity Ison said he remembered a car out after curfew. Corrales pulled up, opened the car’s door and he “just started hitting the guy in the car,” Ison said.

Some soldiers testified they regularly lived in fear that the 5-foot-6 Corrales, who was explosive at times and calm at others, would fire them from the prestigious scouts platoon.

After the Iraqi was shot, the fear grew. One soldier slept with a knife at the ready.

Staff Sgt. Ronald Shipp said “I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t afraid – afraid of somebody going off the deep end.”

Soldiers said Corrales had a close relationship with the battalion commander, Lt. Col. Michael Browder. Michael Waddington, Shore’s attorney, said Corrales was known as Browder’s “wrecking ball.”

Shore said he initially didn’t think anything would come of the shooting, and it would be swept under the rug.

Browder, the battalion commander, was relieved of command. He’s now deputy commander of a basic training brigade at Fort Benning, Ga., officials said.

The Corrales family, on a MySpace page, said Trey Corrales has fought for his country in Macedonia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq.

As a result of the charges, the Corrales family said, it is faced with mortgaging “all that we have worked so hard for throughout our life, in order to pay for an attorney to defend him; to defend him from the very organization that he has proudly served for, for over 14 years.”

IN BRIEF

Army report says there’s no plans to put Strykers aboard Superferry

Suspicion continues, mostly in the blogosphere, over supposed connections between the Hawaii Superferry and the Army’s Stryker brigade, which is in Iraq.

In an environmental impact statement recommending that the Stryker brigade be permanently stationed in Hawai’i, the Army addressed the question of how the 19-ton armored vehicles would be moved to the Big Island for training.

The Army said its primary method of transporting the Strykers is by logistics support vessels operated by the Army.

If those aren’t available, the Army said, it would use private contract vessels. Typically, those are barges, and the service said it is required to get bids from multiple vendors.

“The Army does not know if the Superferry would ever bid on such a contract or if it could even be configured to carry military equipment with the chains and bracing needed to transport Stryker vehicles,” the service said. “No contract currently exists or is being formulated between the Army and the Superferry for transporting the (Stryker brigade).”

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Feb/25/ln/hawaii802250323.html

Army jury convicts island soldier of assault in death of Iraqi civilian

Army jury convicts island soldier of assault in death of Iraqi civilian

STORY SUMMARY »

A military jury convicted a Schofield Barracks soldier yesterday of a reduced charge of assault in the death of an Iraqi civilian last year.

Army Spc. Christopher Shore of Winder, Ga., was found guilty of aggravated assault in the June 23 shooting death. He was sentenced to 120 days in jail, will have his rank reduced to private and will receive a reprimand. He was originally charged with murder, but that was reduced to manslaughter and the jury found him guilty of the lesser offense.

Shore contends he shot at the civilian but purposely missed after being ordered to kill the man. He says he was following the orders of his platoon leader, Sgt. 1st Class Trey Corrales.

Corrales is charged with premeditated murder and will be tried starting April 22.

FULL STORY »

By Gregg K. Kakesako
gkakesako@starbulletin.com

A 26-year-old Schofield Barracks soldier was convicted yesterday of assault after being cleared of murdering a 28-year-old unarmed, wounded Iraqi civilian last summer.

Spc. Christopher Shore of Winder, Ga., was sentenced to 120 days in jail, will receive an official reprimand, and will be demoted to private.

Derrick Sparks, Shore’s half brother, said the conviction on a lesser charge was “an answer to our prayers. We spent a long time praying. A lot of people prayed for my brother, and I want to tell everybody thank you. … I knew my brother was innocent.”

The verdict, by the jury of five enlisted soldiers and four officers, came after four hours of deliberation. Shore showed little emotion when the verdict was read, but once the court-martial went into a recess, he hugged his father, Brian; his wife, Katherin; and Sparks in the hallway outside of the courtroom.

During the sentencing phase of his court-martial, Shore cried when asked by his attorney Michael Waddington to describe his relations with members of his scout platoon.

Shore recalled that nearly half his platoon of 26 did not survive the 15-month Iraq deployment that ended in October. Ten soldiers died Aug. 22 when their Black Hawk helicopter crashed returning to base.

He initially had been charged with premeditated murder. He said he had been only following the orders of his platoon leader, Sgt. 1st Class Trey Corrales, during an early morning raid June 23 near Kirkuk. Corrales is charged with premeditated murder and will be tried starting April 22.

An investigative officer, following an Article 32 hearing in October, recommended that Shore be charged with aggravated assault. However, Lt. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, in one of his last actions as commanding general of the 25th Infantry Division, sent the matter to a court-martial with the manslaughter charge.

Army prosecutors maintained that Shore could have avoided firing his rifle by leaving the scene as other members of his platoon did.

Army prosecutor Capt. James Leary said Shore’s decision to fire two shots at the victim was itself illegal.

Throughout the investigation, subsequent hearings and this week’s court-martial, both sides did not dispute that Corrales shot the Iraqi. But there was conflicting testimony on whether Shore fired any shots at the victim. Waddington said Shore deliberately aimed away from the Iraqi’s body.

Waddington repeatedly argued during the two-day court-martial that there was not enough forensic evidence to prove that bullets from Shore’s M-4 carbine killed the Iraqi. He described the investigation as “sloppy,” saying investigators initially went to the wrong house and excavated the wrong yard.

Waddington, in closing arguments, said Shore also was under duress because he feared his platoon leader, Corrales.

Yesterday, Waddington read into the court record the written statement of Essa Ahmed, the unit’s interpreter, who said he was asked by Corrales to translate the word “run” in Arabic, which Corrales used several times in instructing the victim.

After hearing four shots, Ahmed said he heard Corrales tell his soldiers, “I killed that mother—-.”

An autopsy later revealed the Iraqi was shot five times in the head, left and right arms, and back.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2008/02/21/news/story04.html

Rape in the U.S. military

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oew-marshall30jan30,0,510658.story

Rape in the U.S. military

How a fraternal culture and a habit of blaming the victim leave sexual violence unexamined and unpunished.

By Lucinda Marshall
January 30, 2008

Anne K. Ream’s recent Op-Ed sheds much needed light on how the U.S. military continues to trivialize rape and sexual assault committed by members of the armed forces. Writing about whether a man who is convicted of rape in a civilian court should still be entitled to a traditional military funeral, Ream points out that although barring full honor burials in such a situation is largely a symbolic act, “the military policy of allowing honors burials for veterans convicted of rape sends a chilling message to victims: Even the most heinous sexual violence does not trump prior military service.”

The case Ream refers to is not an isolated incident of fraternal militarism being used to excuse sexual violence. In a recent court case in Lebanon, Penn., an Army Reserve sergeant was convicted of indecent assault after rape charges were dropped when fellow soldiers who were present at the incident refused to cooperate with police. Responding to the verdict, the defendant’s attorney said she thought he should have been cleared of all charges. “After all, he did serve his country.”

Unfortunately, this mind-set is consistent with the Pentagon’s very poor record of prosecuting sexual assault and rape within the ranks while at the same time disregarding and further victimizing those who report these heinous crimes. To put these cases in perspective, there were 2,947 reports of sexual assaults in the military in 2006, an increase in reports of 24% over 2005. However, very few of these cases tend to be prosecuted. A Pentagon report [PDF] in March 2007 found that more than half of the investigations dating back to 2004 resulted in no action. When action was taken, only one third of the cases resulted in courts-martial.

Indeed, in many cases, the military seems more intent on intimidating and harassing the victims than investigating and prosecuting the charges. In 2004, after Lt. Jennifer Dyer reported being raped by a fellow officer at Camp Shelby, Miss., she said she was held in seclusion for three days, read her Miranda rights and threatened with criminal prosecution for filing a false report. After finally being given two weeks leave, she was threatened with prosecution for being AWOL when she would not report for duty to the same location where the man she had accused – who was later acquitted on assault charges – was still posted.

Lance Cpl. Sally Griffiths was also accused of lying after she reported being raped by a fellow Marine while stationed in Okinawa, Japan. It wasn’t until she got access to her case file and found a statement by the Marine that confirmed her story that she was able to obtain the discharge she sought. The Marine she accused was never prosecuted. He continued to serve in the military and was promoted several times.

After Army Spc. Suzanne Swift went AWOL instead of staying in the same unit as the soldiers who she accused of sexually harassing her, the Army court-martialed her when she refused a deal that would have forced her to remain in the military and sign a statement saying she had not been raped.

More recently, there have been the well-publicized cases of Lance Cpl. Maria Lauterbach, who was murdered after accusing another Marine of rape, and Jamie Leigh Jones, who says that she was gang-raped while working for Halliburton/KBR in Iraq. Jones claims that after she reported her rape, the company put her in a shipping container and warned her that she would lose her job if she left Iraq for medical treatment. The rape kit collected by military medical personnel was lost after it was turned over to Halliburton/KBR. The Pentagon has refused to investigate or to testify before Congress.

In allowing convicted rapists to be buried with full honors, the military continues to perpetuate the culture of impunity that allows soldiers to commit sexual violence with little worry of being brought to justice. As Ream concludes, it is sadly ironic that even though rape and sexual violence are now considered war crimes, our own military persists in practices that perpetuate those crimes. Unfortunately, this is merely one more example of the misogyny implicit in military culture. Women’s bodies and lives have always been considered the spoils of war. The military’s continuing disregard and disrespect for the safety of women’s lives even within their own ranks, and in disregard of international law, should give us pause to wonder just whose freedom we are protecting.

Lucinda Marshall is a feminist artist, writer, activist and founder of the Feminist Peace Network.

Kaneohe Marine charged with sex assault of teen

Posted at 9:38 p.m., Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Kaneohe Marine charged with sex assault of teen

Advertiser Staff

A Kane’ohe-based Marine is being held in lieu of $250,000 bail tonight after being indicted on eight sex-assault involving a 14-year-old girl.

Hugo Ismael Valentin Jr., 39, had been charged Jan. 7 with one count of first-degree and two counts of third-degree sex assault.

He was arrested at Building 5071 on the Marine base today at 4:39 p.m. and booked on four counts each of first- and third-degree sex assault.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Jan/15/br/br5864701329.html

Ex-Air Force man pleads guilty to child porn

HonoluluAdvertiser.com

Updated at 6:20 p.m., Monday, December 3, 2007

Ex-Hawaii resident pleads guilty to child porn

Advertiser Staff

A former Hawai’i resident today pleaded guilty in Maryland to federal charges of possessing child pornography and could be sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Gregory D. Corbitt, 39, of Glen Burnie, Md., was found in possession of more than 600 images of child pornography in 2006 on Oct. 27 and Nov. 29 while residing at Hickam Air Force Base where his wife was stationed. The images were stored on a laptop computer owned by his wife and compact discs stored at the Hickam home.

Corbitt admitted to Air Force investigators the pornographic images on the computer belonged to him and told agents where to find the additional discs, according to a news release issued by the U.S. attorney’s office in Hawai’i today.

The case against Corbitt was transferred to the Maryland district because he moved there before being indicted here.

Corbitt will be sentenced Feb. 22, 2008.

Soldier held in alleged dorm thefts

Soldier held in alleged dorm thefts

By Gene Park
gpark@starbulletin.com

An Army specialist about to be deployed to Iraq went into the University of Hawaii dormitories Sunday and allegedly pilfered panties and an iPod, police said.

Spc. Mark Heath, 20, was charged Monday night with first-degree burglary and unauthorized entry into a dwelling. He was arrested Sunday after he was caught in the Hale Aloha Lokelani dorms on Dole Street on the university’s Manoa campus.

According to court documents, at about 9 a.m. Sunday, Heath allegedly opened the door to a dorm room and stuck his head inside as he peered in. When he saw a male witness, Heath allegedly fled.

The witness ran after Heath and asked him why he was trying to get into his girlfriend’s room. Heath said he was looking for a male student in another room.

Heath was escorted to security. Police said officers who responded smelled alcohol on his breath. Heath was arrested on suspicion of unauthorized entry into the dorm.

When police patted Heath down, they found a 30- gigabyte iPod in his right pants pocket, the court documents say. Police also found women’s lingerie in his pockets.

A female student approached the officers later and said she was missing an iPod. The student confirmed the iPod and some of the lingerie belonged to her. Heath was arrested on suspicion of first-degree burglary.

Heath belongs to the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, which is based at Schofield Barracks and is preparing to deploy to Iraq next month.

Heath is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail and has no prior arrests.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2007/11/28/news/story05.html

Stryker soldier charged with UH dorm break-in

Army man charged with UH dorm break-in

By Rod Ohira

Advertiser Staff Writer

A 20-year-old man assigned to the Army’s Stryker brigade at Schofield charged in connection with Sunday’s alleged break-in at a University of Hawai’i at Manoa dorm room was in possession of stolen property, which included women’s underwear and an iPod, according to a court document. Mark Andrew Heath, accused of unauthorized entry into a dwelling and first-degree burglary, was being held in lieu of $100,000 bail awaiting a preliminary hearing Thursday at District Court on his warrantless arrest following his initial appearance at court today.

High bail was requested and granted because Heath presents a “danger to the community,” prosecutors said.

According to Schofield public affairs, Heath is a scout with Alpha Troop 2nd Squadron 14th Cavalry. The spokesperson was not sure if Heath is scheduled for deployment to Iraq with the Stryker brigade in coming weeks.

The soldier was arrested at 9:35 a.m. Sunday in the lobby of the Lokelani Dorm building at 2579 Dole St. by police investigating a reported break-in.

The unauthorized entry charge stems from Heath allegedly opening the door and entering a fourth-floor unit, according to an affidavit filed at District Court. A woman resident and her boyfriend were in the unit.

The boyfriend chased down Heath after he allegedly fled from the room.

When asked why he trying to enter the room, Heath allegedly said he was looking for a friend, “Travis Ford in dorm room 453,” the affidavit stated. Police and Campus Security said a check of the name and room number met with negative results, the document said.

According to witnesses, Heath appeared intoxicated, the affidavit said.

The woman resident of the dorm room Heath allegedly entered is the complainant in the unauthorized entry case.

Another 18-year-old female student and Lokelani Dorm resident identified a pink Nano iPod and
ingerie allegedly found in Heath’s possession as belonging to her, leading to the burglary charge.

The student told authorities the items were stolen sometime between Thanksgiving day and Sunday from her dorm room, the court document said. Her’s is a different room than the one in the unauthorized entry case.

UH spokesman Gregg Takayama said school officials are investigating how Heath gained entrance into Lokelani Dorm, which is part of the cluster of Hale Aloha campus dorms.

Takayama said the dorms have around-the-clock front desk check-in where guests are admitted only if escorted by a resident. Takayama declined comment when asked if Heath was a registered guest.

Dorm residents were also advised to lock their doors from the beginning of the current school year, Takayama said.

According to investigators, the dorms are not equipped with security surveillance cameras.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2007/Nov/27/br/br8193742056.html