Lodi News-Sentinel

Marine held 2 years without charges

- By Andrew Dyer

SAN DIEGO — A Marine recruit arrested for allegedly striking a drill instructor at the service’s San Diego boot camp has spent most of the last two years in the brig and is now confined to a federal prison hospital.

He has not had a trial, nor has he been charged with a crime, according to the Marine Corps and the man’s attorney.

Jay-Ar Ruiz’ case raises questions about how the military justice system handles complex issues involving mental health, his attorney says, and how someone like Ruiz — who his lawyer says had a preexistin­g mental illness — was allowed to ship off to boot camp in the first place.

Ruiz, 28, enlisted in the Marine Corps in Los Angeles and reported to the San Diego Marine Corps Recruit Depot in November 2017. By January 2018, three months later, he was locked in the brig at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, where he would remain for 22 months.

It wasn’t long after he started training that Ruiz began exhibiting behaviors his lawyer says were symptomati­c of mental illness — a condition she says should have disqualifi­ed him for military service.

“Within days (of arriving at boot camp) he starts exhibiting behaviors with this personalit­y disorder,” said attorney Beth PaytonO’Brien during an interview. “He gets dropped within 30 days. He should have never been recruited.”

Payton-O’Brien, a retired Navy captain and former military judge, is Ruiz’ civilian military defense attorney. She recently signed on to defend the Marine, who is incarcerat­ed at a secure federal medical center in Springfiel­d, Missouri.

He was transferre­d to the facility in November, after 22 months in the Miramar brig.

Payton-O’Brien said Ruiz authorized her to discuss his case and medical condition with the UnionTribu­ne, which has also been in communicat­ion with Ruiz via letters and email.

A spokesman for MCRD San Diego, which is still Ruiz’ command, said he could not go into detail about Ruiz’ case, though the Marines do not dispute the main facts as described by PaytonO’Brien.

Ruiz’ issues began well before he shipped off to boot camp in November 2017.

In June 2017, a woman in Los Angeles County filed a temporary restrainin­g order against him, according to online court records, which did not provide details. However, upon arrival in boot camp, Ruiz began sending the woman letters, violating the order.

When he was confronted by a Marine staff sergeant about the letters and was served with a military protective order, Ruiz reacted violently, striking the staff sergeant, who placed him in a bear hug, rendering him unconsciou­s, PaytonO’Brien said.

He received medical care and was sent to the brig.

As in the civilian justice system, military service members facing criminal charges can be held in custody before trial. A military brig functions like a jail and a prison.

Ruiz began pretrial confinemen­t in January 2018, awaiting an article 32 hearing which, in the military system, is similar to a civilian grand jury, except a hearing officer hears testimony and makes a recommenda­tion whether to proceed to court-martial.

Early in Ruiz’ process, it became apparent to his first military defense attorney that he was not fit to defend himself, PaytonO’Brien said. It took six months before Navy doctors examined his mental health.

In the military justice system, a service member will normally be treated for any mental illness until they are deemed competent to defend themselves in court, PaytonO’Brien said.

Ruiz has gone through at least two competency hearings, she said. He was again found not mentally competent for trial last summer and transferre­d to the medical facility in Missouri in November.

“I can’t believe how long this case has been sitting around,” PaytonO’Brien said. “It’s shocking to me that if somebody is found to be not competent to assist in their defense, that it would take almost four months to get him transferre­d into a mental health facility.”

A Marine Corps official not authorized to comment publicly told the Union-Tribune that delays in Ruiz’ case could be partially attributed to the Marine’s conduct while in the brig, which included damaging the facilities.

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