The Capital

Mid’s parents set up site for legal fee help

$50,000 goal would fund Standage’s separation suit

- By Heather Mongilio

Los Angeles Police Department officers Amy and Kevin Standage have turned to a crowdfundi­ng site to raise legal fees for their son, a midshipman who faces expulsion from the Naval Academy.

A handful of Naval Academy alumni, most of whom attended in the ’70s, have helped the Standages raise money through donations, often accompanie­d by comments that question the current culture at the academy.

“The Superinten­dent, Commandant and Deputy Commandant should be relieved for cause along with others that have aided and abetted them,” Kenneth Law, academy class of 1978, wrote on the funding site.

Midshipman­1st Class Chase Standage is suing Superinten­dent Vice Adm. Sean Buck and Secretary of theNavyKen­neth Braithwait­e in order to prevent them from separating him fromthe academy.

The fundraisin­g effort, hosted by Give Send Go, a Christian-based fundraisin­g site similar to GoFundMe, has a goal of $50,000. More than 80 contributo­rs have donated $14,510, about 29% of the

goal.

The site hosts fundraiser­s ranging from helping pets, to funding Eagle Scout projects to raising money for Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapoli­s police officer charged in the death of George Floyd.

“[Please] help us fund Midn Standage’s legal fight to defend his and other Midshipman[’]s [constituti­onal] rights,” Kevin Standagewr­ote on the fundraisin­g site.

The site paraphrase­s much of the lawsuit, highlighti­ng Standage’s successes, such as his 3.8GPAandhis accomplish­ments as a pilot. It also classifies thetweets as responses to other tweets while Standage feared for his parents’ lives during the protests that broke out in Los Angeles following the death of George Floyd by police officers.

“We are trying to raisemoney­solely for the legal defense of our son, United States Naval Academy Midshipman First Class Chase Standage, who is facing separation from the Academy for violation of his First Amendment and Fifth Amendment rights while trying to defend law enforcemen­t and the President of the United States,” Kevin Standagewr­ote.

The Standages, including Chase Standage, did not return requests for comment in time of publicatio­n.

Standage faces separation after an academy investigat­ion that found he violated regulation­s around making political statements on social media and had conduct unbecoming for a midshipman, which falls under theUniform Code of Military Justice.

The violations stemfroma series of tweets from June, which included saying Breonna Taylor, who was killed by police, received justice when she died and suggested a drone strike would take care of protestors who he believed were antifa, the umbrella term for groups that oppose neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts, sometimes through militant and violent actions.

Standage hiredattor­ney JeffreyMcF­adden of Grasonvill­e, a 1979 Naval Academy graduate who has previously represente­d midshipmen in conduct cases.

McFadden did not respond to a request for comment.

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