Hartford Courant

Texas soldier’s slaying inspires bill to expand military code

- By Acacia Coronado and James LaPorta

AUSTIN, Texas — Decisions on whether to prosecute members of the U.S. military for sexual assault or sexual harassment would be handled outside the chain of command under a measure members of Congress proposed Wednesday that is named for a Texas soldier who was slain by a fellow soldier.

Reps. Jackie Speier, a Democrat from California, and Markwayne Mullin, a Republican from Oklahoma, said their bill would make sexual harassment a crime within the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The bipartisan bill has at least 73 co-sponsors.

Speier said that 20% of military service members are female, but that women make up more than 60% of victims in military cases of assault. She said younger women of lower rank were most at risk.

“The voices of those survivors have never been louder or more clear,” Speier said. “This is the military’s ‘me too’ moment.”

The “I Am Vanessa Guillen Act” is named after the hashtag that was used by military sexual assault survivors to denounce their experience­s on social media when Spc. Vanessa Guillen went missing in April.

According to a federal complaint, Guillen was bludgeoned to death at Fort Hood, near Killeen, Texas. Her body was found July 1, when a fellow soldier, Spc. Aaron Robinson, was confronted by police and died by suicide.

Holding up somber signs that read “Military Sexual Assault Ends With Us,” a coalition of military sexual assault survivors, the Guillen family and their attorney joined the House members to present the bill at the U.S. Capitol.

Guillen’s family has stated multiple times that Guillen was sexually harassed on the base by a fellow soldier, who they said was Robinson.

According to Natalie Khawam, who represents the Guillen family, Guillen told her mother that a soldier of a higher rank walked in and watched her while she was showering.

U.S. Army officials said in July that they had found no evidence that Guillen had been sexually harassed by Robinson after Guillen did not formally file a report on the harassment. Officials said they had evidence that Guillen did face other kinds of harassment by other people at the Central Texas base.

In July, U.S. Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy ordered an independen­t review of command climate at Fort Hood and said the investigat­ion into the harassment claims were ongoing.

In August, McCarthy said Fort Hood had one of the highest rates of murder, sexual assault and harassment in the Army and in September ordered that the investigat­ion into Guillen’s case be expanded to the command’s response from the day she went missing to the day she was found.

Military leaders would be mandated to launch

command-directed investigat­ions to be carried out by an independen­t investigat­or who is outside a victim’s chain of command if the bill becomes law.

However, independen­t investigat­ions of sexual harassment would not go into effect for two years after the legislatio­n became law. The delay is to give each branch of service time for training on investigat­ing complaints of sexual harassment.

The bill would also strip commanders — known as convening authoritie­s in the military — from the decision to prosecute cases where a sexual offense is involved and give the authority to a uniformed chief prosecutor — similar to a district attorney in local government.

The Defense Department has historical­ly been resolute in maintainin­g the authoritie­s granted to a convening authority, arguing that it’s a commander’s duty to maintain “good order and discipline” within their unit. Last year, the U.S. military’s top uniformed attorneys were staunch in their criticisms over passing legislatio­n that would seek to remove a commander from the process of deciding whether to prosecute serious crimes like those involving sexual assault.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? Gloria Guillen, mother of slain Spc. Vanessa Guillen, gives a tearful address July 30 in Washington. Vanessa’s sister Lupe Guillen, center, and attorney Natalie Khawam join in.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP Gloria Guillen, mother of slain Spc. Vanessa Guillen, gives a tearful address July 30 in Washington. Vanessa’s sister Lupe Guillen, center, and attorney Natalie Khawam join in.

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