Orlando Sentinel

The Army is grappling

As military claims progress vs. sex crimes, cases arise

- By Craig Whitlock

with a resurgence of cases in which troops responsibl­e for preventing sexual assault have been accused of rape and related crimes.

The Army is grappling with a resurgence of cases in which troops responsibl­e for preventing sexual assault have been accused of rape and related crimes, undercutti­ng the Pentagon’s claims that it is making progress against sexual violence in the ranks.

In the most recent case, an Army prosecutor in charge of sexual assault investigat­ions in the Southwest was charged by the military last month with putting a knife to the throat of a lawyer he had been dating and raping her on two occasions, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post.

Additional­ly, a soldier at Fort Sill, Okla., who was certified as a sexual-assaultpre­vention officer, was convicted at a court-martial in May of five counts of raping a preteen girl.

Army officials confirmed to The Washington Post that eight other soldiers and civilians trained to deter sex offenses or help victims have been investigat­ed over the past year in connection with sexual assault. The Army would not provide details, saying that many of the investigat­ions are pending.

Other branches of the armed forces have faced their own embarrassm­ents. The deputy director of the Air Force’s office of sexual assault prevention at the Pentagon resigned last year after the Air Force inspector general rebuked him for making sexually inappropri­ate comments and creating “an intimidati­ng and offensive working environmen­t,” according to a confidenti­al report obtained by The Post under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

Air Force staff members complained that the senior executive, Jay Aanrud, made sexist remarks about tight pants and Hooters models, and said it is women’s work to shop and eat bonbons, according to the report. Aanrud told investigat­ors that he was joking and that his remarks were misconstru­ed.

Despite the investigat­ion, the Air Force rehired Aanrud last month to work at the Pentagon as a technical specialist on aviation issues. An Air Force spokeswoma­n said he doesn’t supervise anyone in his new job. Aanrud declined to comment.

For the armed forces, the cases are a painful reminder of similar scandals that erupted in 2013.

That year, the Air Force’s chief sexual-assault-prevention officer at the Pentagon was accused of groping a woman outside a bar; he was later acquitted by a civilian jury but reprimande­d by the military. An Army sergeant in charge of helping sexual assault victims at Fort Hood, Texas, was convicted of pandering for pimping female soldiers.

In addition, each of the military services was tainted by reports of young women being assaulted by uniformed recruiters.

With angry lawmakers in Congress demanding a crackdown, then-Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered the armed forces in May 2013 to retrain and rescreen tens of thousands of military recruiters and sexual-assault-prevention officers.

Five months after Hagel’s order, a soldier attending a sexual-assault-prevention conference in Orlando was accused of getting drunk and raping a woman he met at his hotel. The Army investigat­ed but did not file charges because the woman declined to cooperate.

Since then, the military has invested millions of additional dollars in sexualassa­ult-awareness programs. Training is mandatory for everyone in uniform. Top brass have promised to redouble their efforts to punish offenders and protect victims.

“We’ve been putting extraordin­ary resources into this area,” said Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Colo., chairman of the House Armed Services subcommitt­ee for military personnel. “Of all the issues we have on my committee, we have spent more time on sexual assault than any other issue.”

Last year, the Defense Department received 6,172 reports of sexual assault in the ranks — a new high and almost twice as many as were reported in 2010. Pentagon officials have called the increase an encouragin­g sign that more victims are willing to come forward and trust the military to help them.

To tackle the problem, the Army employs 650 fulltime sexual assault response coordinato­rs and victim advocates, plus 2,200 others who work part-time.

In the past year, eight of them have been accused of sexual assault, triggering criminal investigat­ions by a combinatio­n of military and civilian authoritie­s, said William Sharp, an Army spokesman at the Pentagon.

Officials from the Navy, the Marine Corps and the Air Force told The Post that none of their personnel involved in sexual assault prevention have been investigat­ed for sex crimes over the past year.

Lt. Col. Jennifer Johnson, an Army spokeswoma­n, said the service adopted new standards in 2013 for screening sexual-assaultpre­vention personnel, drill instructor­s, recruiters and others who hold positions of “significan­t trust.”

She said the standards are more stringent than what the Defense Department requires but that the Army has decided to review them again “to determine if any changes are required.”

Few personnel get more screening than the Army’s special-victim prosecutor­s, a team of 23 lawyers who oversee sex crime and domestic violence cases across the country. The job is considered an elite position within the Judge Advocate General’s Corps.

The program was thrown into turmoil in 2014 when its supervisor was investigat­ed for allegedly groping a female lawyer — at a sexualassa­ult-prevention conference.

The supervisor, Lt. Col. Jay Morse, acknowledg­ed having an intimate encounter with the woman but denied touching her without consent. Army officials ultimately decided that they lacked evidence to press criminal charges, but reprimande­d Morse for misconduct. He retired soon after.

The Army has since been rattled by another case involving a special-victim prosecutor.

In August 2016, a lawyer who worked for the Army walked into the Comanche County Courthouse in Lawton, Okla., to seek a protective order against a man she had been dating: Capt. Scott Hockenberr­y, who handled cases at Fort Sill and other posts in the region.

The woman alleged in court papers that their relationsh­ip had turned violent and that Hockenberr­y had raped her three times over the previous month. She also alleged that he had placed a knife against her throat during one of the assaults and injured her jaw on another occasion, according to her protective­order applicatio­n.

“They started dating but it got out of control,” said Robert Don Gifford, an attorney for the woman.

Hockenberr­y disputed the allegation­s and has filed a defamation claim against the woman in state court in Oklahoma, documents show. The Army reassigned him to the Military District of Washington and conducted a lengthy criminal investigat­ion.

Last month, it charged Hockenberr­y with sexually assaulting the woman on two occasions, placing a knife against her throat and striking her in the face, according to military charging documents obtained by The Post. A preliminar­y hearing is scheduled for this month.

“We categorica­lly deny all of the allegation­s made by this accuser. Period. Full stop,” said Will Helixon, an attorney representi­ng Hockenberr­y.

Another recent case that has received high-level attention surfaced in August at Fort Benning, Ga., a boot-camp hub for the Army.

The Army suspended several drill instructor­s after female recruits reported being sexually assaulted. A criminal investigat­ion is pending. The Army has released few details, although it has since relieved a Fort Benning battalion commander for “a loss of confidence in his ability” to lead.

 ?? CHARLES DHARAPAK/AP 2008 ?? Top brass at the Pentagon have promised to redouble their efforts to punish sexual assault offenders and protect victims.
CHARLES DHARAPAK/AP 2008 Top brass at the Pentagon have promised to redouble their efforts to punish sexual assault offenders and protect victims.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States