Orlando Sentinel

Marine drill instructor gets 10 years in recruits’ abuse case

- By Emery P. Dalesio

RALEIGH, N.C. — A Marine Corps drill instructor was sentenced Friday to 10 years in prison for choking, punching or otherwise tormenting recruits, especially three Muslims — one of whom ultimately killed himself by leaping down a stairwell.

A military jury handed out the punishment to Gunnery Sgt. Joseph Felix a day after convicting him of abusing more than a dozen trainees at the Marine Corps boot camp at Parris Island, S.C.

Among other things, he taunted the Muslims as “terrorists” or “ISIS” and ordered two of them to climb into a clothes dryer, spinning one of them around until he renounced his faith, the jury decided.

Felix, a 34-year-old Iraq veteran, was also ordered to forfeit pay, demoted to private and given a dishonorab­le discharge.

Felix was a central figure in what was found to be a group of abusive drill instructor­s at Parris Island.

After the March 2016 suicide of one of the Muslims, a hazing investigat­ion led to charges against Felix, five other drill instructor­s and the training battalion’s commanding officer.

Eleven others faced lesser discipline.

The charges against Felix included commanding recruits to choke each other; ordering them to drink chocolate milk and then training them until they vomited; and punching recruits in the face or kicking them to the ground.

“He wasn’t making Marines. He was breaking Marines,” prosecutor Lt. Col. John Norman told the jury Wednesday.

He called Felix a bully who heaped special abuse on three Muslim recruits because of their faith.

One of them, Raheel Siddiqui, hurled himself to his death after Felix barked at and slapped the 20-year-old Pakistani-American from Taylor, Mich.

Siddiqui’s family sued the Marine Corps last month for $100 million.

The government did not charge Felix with any crime directly related to Siddiqui’s death.

The judge, Lt. Col. Michael Libretto, did not allow testimony about whether Felix’s actions were responsibl­e for the recruit’s death.

Felix was convicted of ordering Lance Cpl. Ameer Bourmeche into a dryer, which then was turned on as Felix demanded he renounce his faith.

Bourmeche testified that he twice affirmed his faith, and Felix and another drill instructor twice sent him for a bruising, scorching tumble inside the dryer.

After a third spin, Bourmeche said, he feared for his life and renounced his religion. The drill instructor­s then let him out, he said.

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