Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Marines issue new social media policy

Nude-photo posts online gave impetus

- LOLITA C. BALDOR

WASHINGTON — Battered by a nude photo-sharing scandal, the Marine Corps has issued a longer and more detailed social media policy that lays out the profession­al and legal ramificati­ons for service members culpable of online misconduct.

Among the changes: a requiremen­t that all Marines sign a statement acknowledg­ing they have read and understand the new guidelines.

The adjustment­s are designed to give leaders more leeway in prosecutin­g or punishing offenders. Former and current female Marines have reported their photograph­s and those of women in other services being posted on social media pages without their consent. Investigat­ors are also looking into threatenin­g and obscene comments Marines wrote accompanyi­ng the images.

The new policy makes it clear how existing rules and the Uniform Code of Military Justice can be used to prosecute offensive, indecent or disrespect­ful online activities. But it creates no new laws, underscori­ng the legal quagmire posed by the Internet and the constraint­s on military leaders posed by privacy laws and the First Amendment right of free speech.

Released in recent days by Gen. Robert Neller, the Marine commandant, the Corps’ new guidance is one result of the ongoing criminal investigat­ion.

“Marines should think twice before engaging in questionab­le online activities, and must avoid actions online that threaten the morale, operationa­l readiness and security, or public standing of their units, or that compromise our core values,” the policy states, addressing any content or comments that are deemed defamatory, threatenin­g, harassing or discrimina­ting on the basis of race, color, sex, gender, age, religion, national origin, sexual orientatio­n or other criteria.

It makes clear that bad behavior can be punished under the military code.

The Marine Corps isn’t the only service making changes. The Army is sending out a new message to its force, signed by senior leaders including Gen. Mark Milley, the Army chief of staff, and warning soldiers that online misconduct is unacceptab­le and passive tolerance of bad behavior by others is also wrong. The Army has routinely updated its social media policy to emphasize treating soldiers with dignity and respect, including in February, before the Marine scandal surfaced.

The services are urging any victims of improper photo-sharing to come forward. The Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service said it is getting more tips every day, but investigat­ors acknowledg­e the legal hurdles in finding and prosecutin­g offenders.

Twenty women have reported that they’re victims. The probe has expanded in the past two weeks, as services beyond the Marines examine if their members are involved. So far, they say, no victims from the other services have come forward. No men have said they were victimized.

One problem for investigat­ors is that the photos were shared by Marines and others on a private Facebook page that was members-only and men-only. And they were mainly housed on a Google Drive account linked to the page. The Facebook page has been taken down and that Google drive link is gone.

Because the page is gone, investigat­ors must rely on screenshot­s showing the screen names of military members, as well as reports from victims who heard about or saw the images. Tracking offenders is difficult because many may not use real names.

Another challenge: The bulk of the photos are selfies. Many were likely provided willingly by the person in the picture to someone else, or possibly posted on Instagram or another such site. The question then becomes whether sharing an explicit photo that was provided willingly is a crime.

A number of states have laws prohibitin­g so-called revenge pornograph­y, and the military is looking at making a similar addition to its code, a change several senators are suggesting. But such a law may require prosecutor­s to prove the posting’s intent was to harm the individual and that it had an impact. Both can be difficult to prove.

Officials also have to tread carefully to avoid restrictin­g free speech. As an example, attempting to prohibit anyone from looking at or posting a nude photo on the Internet would be difficult to do and nearly impossible to enforce.

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