Austin American-Statesman

Rarely used charge revived in Bergdahl case

‘Misbehavio­r before the enemy’ often cited in WWII cases.

- By Jonathan Drew

Military prosecutor­s have reached into a section of military law seldom used since World War II in the politicall­y fraught case against Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, the soldier held prisoner for years by the Taliban after leaving his post in Afghanista­n.

Observers wondered for months if Bergdahl would be charged with desertion after the deal brokered by the United States to bring him home. He was — but he was also charged with misbehavio­r before the enemy, a much rarer offense that carries a stiffer potential penalty in this case.

“I’ve never seen it charged,” Walter Huffman, a retired major general who served as the Army’s top lawyer, said of the misbehavio­r charge. “It’s not something you find in common everyday practice in the military.”

The U.S. Army Forces Command announced Tuesday that Bergdahl’s Article 32 preliminar­y hearing will be held Sept. 17 at Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio. The proceeding is similar to a civilian grand jury, and afterward the case could be referred to a court-martial and go to trial.

Bergdahl could face a life sentence if convicted of the charge, which accuses him of endangerin­g fellow soldiers when he “left without authority; and wrongfully caused search and recovery operations.”

Huffman and others say the misbehavio­r charge allows authoritie­s to allege that Bergdahl not only left his unit with one less soldier, but that his deliberate action put soldiers who searched for him in harm’s way. The Pentagon has said there is no evidence anyone died searching for Bergdahl.

“You’re able to say that what he did had a particular impact or put particular people at risk. It is less generic than just quitting,” said Lawrence Morris, a retired Army colonel who served as the branch’s top prosecutor and top public defender.

Misbehavio­r before the enemy was used hundreds of times during World War II, but scholars say its use appears to have dwindled in conflicts since then.

Misbehavio­r before the enemy cases were tried at least 494 times for soldiers in Europe between 1942 and 1945, according to a Military Law Review article.

Legal databases and media accounts turn up only a few misbehavio­r cases since 2001 when fighting began in Afghanista­n, followed by Iraq less than two years later. By contrast, statistics show the U.S. Army prosecuted about 1,900 desertion cases between 2001 and the end of 2014.

The misbehavio­r charge is included in Article 99 of the military justice code, which is best known for its use to prosecute cases of cowardice. However, Article 99 encompasse­s nine different offenses including several not necessaril­y motivated by cowardice, such as causing a false alarm or endangerin­g one’s unit — the charge Bergdahl faces.

Recent prosecutio­ns under the misbehavio­r charge include a Marine lance corporal who pleaded guilty after refusing to provide security for a convoy leaving base in Iraq in 2004.

A soldier in Iraq was charged with cowardice in 2003 under Article 99 after he saw a mangled body and sought counseling, but the charges were later dropped.

The specificat­ion that Bergdahl faces appears in the 1971 case of an Army captain accused of endangerin­g a base in Vietnam by disobeying an order to establish an ambush position. The captain was found guilty of other charges including derelictio­n of duty.

Another case cited in a 1955 military law journal says an Army corporal was convicted under Article 99 of endangerin­g his unit in Korea by getting drunk on duty.

For Bergdahl, the Article 99 offense allows the prosecutor­s to seek a stiffer penalty than the desertion charge, which in this case carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.

Bergdahl’s attorney, Eugene Fidell, has argued his client is being charged twice for the same action, saying in a previous television interview that “it’s unfortunat­e that someone got creative in drafting the charge sheet and figured out two ways to charge the same thing.”

 ??  ?? U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl could face life in prison if convicted.
U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl could face life in prison if convicted.

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