Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senator requests hold on Air Guard whistleblo­wer’s exit

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MADISON, Wis. — U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin asked the head of the Air Force on Friday to halt discharge proceeding­s against a Wisconsin Air National Guard whistleblo­wer until investigat­ors determine whether his commanders are retaliatin­g against him for complainin­g about sexual assaults in his unit.

Master Sgt. Jay Ellis complained to Baldwin last year about sexual assaults and harassment within his 115th Fighter Wing squadron, spurring two federal investigat­ions that are still ongoing. Ellis filed a separate complaint in May alleging that his superiors are trying to discharge him on medical grounds and deny him retirement benefits in retaliatio­n. The Wisconsin National Guard’s inspector general is investigat­ing those allegation­s, but the discharge process is still moving forward.

Baldwin, a Democrat, sent a letter to Air Force Secretary Barbara Barrett asking her to put a hold on the discharge process until the reprisal investigat­ion is complete. She said it’s “unacceptab­le” that the discharge process is proceeding despite the ongoing investigat­ion into Ellis’ accusation­s and that it could discourage potential witnesses from coming forward in the sexual assault probes.

Barrett’s office didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment on the Wisconsin senator’s request.

Baldwin has been working to protect Ellis since a medical evaluation board at Scott Air Force Base recommende­d on Nov. 6 that he be discharged. She wrote a letter to Maj. Gen. Donald Dunbar, the Wisconsin National Guard’s top commander, and Gen. Joseph Lengyel, chief of the National Guard Bureau in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 8 asking them to halt the process.

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