The Palm Beach Post

Military judge won’t dismiss Bergdahl case

Defense argued that McCain’s comments swayed prosecutio­n.

- By Jonathan Drew Associated Press

RALEIGH, N.C. — A military j udge has re j e c te d a r g uments that Sen. John McCain improperly swayed the prosecutio­n of Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl with negative comments about the soldier who walked off his post in Afghanista­n.

Defense lawyers for Bergdahl argued that McCain exerted unlawful command influence by telling a reporter in 2015 that the Senate committee he leads would hold a hearing if Bergdahl weren’t punished.

Bergdahl, who is scheduled for a military trial in February 2017, disappeare­d from his post in Afghanista­n in June of 2009 and wound up being held captive by the Taliban and its allies for five years. The defense had asked the judge to dismiss charges of desertion and misbehavio­r before the enemy against Bergdahl, or rule that he face no punishment if convicted.

But Army judge Col. Jeffery Nance decided that the comments by the Republican senator from Arizona haven’t unfairly influenced the case.

“No reasonable member of the public knowing that Senator McCain has absolutely no command authority or color of command authority over SGT Bergdahl’s court-martial ... could ever reasonably conclude that the proceeding­s were unfair; no matter what he said or did,” Nance wrote in the ruling, filed Wednesday.

Nance also wrote that he could find no legal precedent that would make McCain, as a retired Navy officer, still subject to the section of the mil- itary justice code prohibitin­g unlawful command influence. Military law prohibits commanders — who may outrank military judges, lawyers, jury members or witnesses — from using their positions to sway the outcomes of court cases.

Bergdahl’s lawyers said t h e y p l a n t o a pp e a l t h e decision. “We believe the decision is incorrect and intend to take the matter to the Army Court of Criminal Appeals as soon as possible,” attorney Eugene Fidell wrote in an email Friday.

Bergdahl has said he left his post in Afghanista­n to draw attention to what he saw as bad decisions by superiors, and he hoped to walk to another base to discuss concerns with a top commander. He was swiftly captured by the Taliban and remained a prisoner until President Barack Obama exchanged five Guantanamo Bay detainees for his safe return in 2014. The swap was sharply criticized by some in Congress. Bergdahl, who is from Idaho, has since been assigned to desk duty at a Texas Army base.

The defense contends that the prosecutio­n was influenced by McCain, who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee. The panel has the power to approve or scuttle assignment­s for top military commanders.

In September 2015, an officer who oversaw a preliminar­y hearing recommende­d that Bergdahl’s case be heard by a misdemeano­r-level tribunal and said imprisonme­nt wasn’t warranted.

But the next month McCain told a reporter: “If it comes out that (Bergdahl) has no punishment, we’re going to have to have a hearing in the Senate Armed Services Committee.”

Experts on military law h av e s a i d t h e c o mment could be perceived by officers involved in the case as a tacit threat.

Weeks later, Gen. Robert B. Abrams sent Bergdahl’s case to a general court-martial, rejecting the hearing officer’s recommenda­tion.

Abrams testified at a pretrial hearing that he wasn’t influenced by McCain’s comments and that he found them inappropri­ate.

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 ?? ANDREW CRAFT / FAYETTEVIL­LE OBSERVER ?? Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl (right) talks with his military attorney, Lt. Col. Franklin Rosenblatt, after an August hearing at Fort Bragg, N.C.
ANDREW CRAFT / FAYETTEVIL­LE OBSERVER Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl (right) talks with his military attorney, Lt. Col. Franklin Rosenblatt, after an August hearing at Fort Bragg, N.C.

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