Manawatu Standard

Lying soldier allowed back into the military

- KIRSTY LAWRENCE

A military man who left two service pistols in his bag and then lied about it has been allowed back into the army.

The captain, whose name is suppressed, admitted charges of negligentl­y failing to perform a duty and doing an act likely to prejudice service discipline.

At a court martial at Linton Military Camp in August he was dismissed from the army, but the Court Martial Appeal Court quashed his sentence in October.

His dismissal was replaced with a sentence of a reduction in rank to lieutenant with three years seniority, and a severe reprimand.

A summary of facts read in court at the court martial said the captain was involved in the Southern Katipo military exercise last year.

He left the operation on November 19 and was asked to return a pistol to the armory at Linton.

He acknowledg­ed it was his responsibi­lity to keep the pistol secure until it was returned.

At Ohakea Air Force Base he was handed a second pistol to secure and return in the same fashion.

The captain put the pistols in his day bag. When he arrived back at Linton he forgot the pistols were in his bag, which he put in his vehicle and drove home.

On November 24, a colleague asked where the pistols were, which was when the captain remembered he’d put them in his bag.

They were returned that day and when he was asked where the pistols had been, the captain said he realised he forgot to put them back, so had driven to Linton and stored them in a room there.

When interviewe­d on November 26, he continued to lie and on November 27 he signed a statement stating what he had said was true.

After this, the captain was interviewe­d twice more. Again, he spoke about storing the guns in the room but he didn’t have an explanatio­n about why the alarm didn’t go off.

Finally, in a follow-up interview, he admitted his previous story wasn’t true.

He admitted the pistols were stored in the boot of his car until they were returned on November 24.

At the court martial, defence lawyer Major Steve Taylor said the captain was doing others a favour by returning the pistols.

He described the lying as a ‘‘momentary lapse of judgment, which spiralled out of his control’’.

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