The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

SEEKING JUSTICE

Pentagon often fails young sex assault victims on bases

- By Justin Pritchard And Reese Dunklin

A decade after the Pentagon began confrontin­g rape in the ranks, the U.S. military frequently fails to protect or provide justice to the children of service members when they are sexually assaulted by other children on base, an Associated Press investigat­ion has found.

Reports of assaults and rapes among kids on military bases often die on the desks of prosecutor­s, even when an attacker confesses. Other cases don’t make it that far because criminal investigat­ors shelve them, despite requiremen­ts they be pursued.

The Pentagon does not know the scope of the problem and does little to track it. AP was able to document nearly 600 sex assault cases on base since 2007 through dozens of interviews and by piecing together records and data from the military’s four main branches and school system.

Sexual violence occurs anywhere children and teens gather on base — homes, schools, playground­s, food courts, even a chapel bathroom. Many cases get lost in a dead zone of justice, with neither victim nor offender receiving help.

“These are the children that we need to be protecting, the children of our heroes,” said

Heather Ryan, a former military investigat­or.

The tens of thousands of kids who live on bases in the U.S. and abroad are not covered by military law. The U.S. Justice Department, which has jurisdicti­on over many military bases, isn’t equipped or inclined to handle cases involving juveniles, so it rarely takes them on.

Federal prosecutor­s, for example, pursued roughly one in seven juvenile sex offense cases that military investigat­ors presented, according to AP’s review of about 100 investigat­ive files from Navy and Marine Corps bases.

In one unprosecut­ed case from Japan, witnesses confirmed that a 17-year-old boy pulled a 17-year-old girl from a car in a school parking lot and took her to his residence, where she said he raped her. A medical exam of the girl found his semen.

On a U.S. Army base in Germany, Leandra Mulla told investigat­ors that her teenage ex-boyfriend dragged her to a secluded area and thrust his hand down her pants while forcibly trying to kiss her. Four years later, Mulla still wonders what came of her report.

Offenders, meanwhile, typically receive neither therapy nor punishment, and some are shuffled off to other installati­ons or into the civilian world.

In North Carolina, at Camp Lejeune, the coastal training ground for U.S. Marines, a 9-year-old boy admitted to Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service investigat­ors that he had fondled toddlers in his home and classmates at Heroes Elementary School. He said he couldn’t help himself.

Military child abuse specialist­s couldn’t help him either — they intervene only when the alleged abuser is a parent or other caretaker. A federal prosecutor twice declined to take action.

A dozen current or former prosecutor­s and military investigat­ors described to AP how policies within the Pentagon and Justice Department thwarted efforts to help victims and rehabilita­te offenders.

“The military is designed to kill people and break things,” said former Army criminal investigat­or Russell Strand, one of the military’s pioneering experts on sexual assault. “The primary mission, it’s not to deal with kids sexually assaulting kids on federal property.”

Sexual assault cases can be difficult to investigat­e and messy to prosecute, more so when they involve children. Offenders may threaten further harm, and victims or their parents may not want to relive the trauma through lengthy investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns.

AP began investigat­ing sexual violence among military children after readers of its 2017 investigat­ion of sex assault in U.S. public schools described an even more complex problem on bases.

AP found the otherwise data-driven Pentagon does not analyze reports it receives of sexual violence among children and teens on base. When the Defense Department said it could not pinpoint the number of assault reports, AP used U.S. Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests to obtain investigat­ive reports and data from the agencies that police the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marines. AP also analyzed documents released by the Pentagon’s school system, which educates 71,000 students in seven U.S. states and 11 other countries.

Records the military initially released omitted a third of the cases AP identified through interviews with prosecutor­s, military investigat­ors, family members, whistleblo­wers and data that officials later provided. Other cases get buried.

Strand, now a privatesec­tor consultant, estimated that in the Army alone colleagues passed on opening several hundred sex assault cases involving offenders under 14. Strand said he learned of those alleged assaults in the 32 years that he was a military investigat­or and, later, as a trainer.

Responding to AP’s findings, the Defense Department said it “takes seriously any incident impacting the well-being of our service members and their families.” The department promised to take “appropriat­e actions” to help juveniles involved in sex assaults. It said it was “not aware of any juvenile sex offender treatment specialist­s” working in the military or its school system.

The Office of the Secretary of Defense described child-on-child sexual assault as “an emerging issue” that merited further review. AP found that military lawyers have warned about a juvenile justice black hole since the 1970s.

The military’s school system said student safety was its highest priority, that school officials were obligated to report all incidents and that “a single report of sexual assault is one too many.”

MISSING REPORTS

Leandra Mulla was a freshman at Vilseck High School on a U.S. Army base in Germany when, she recalls, her former boyfriend dragged her off campus and sexually assaulted her one afternoon in February 2014. Her basketball coach saw her crying and alerted the principal’s office.

At a police station on base, Army criminal investigat­ors and local authoritie­s met with Mulla. They took some of her clothes as evidence, she said, and when it was over an officer explained someone would be in touch.

After no one followed up and the boy remained in school, her father sought answers. Pete Mulla, a civilian Army employee, said military fuzzy investigat­ors details about offered German officials possibly having done something.

All the family could glean was that some sort of restrainin­g order had been issued.

“I just really want closure,” said Mulla, who graduated last spring. “At least tell me something.”

Prosecutor­s in Germany, who share jurisdicti­on over crimes on U.S. military bases there, told AP they investigat­ed but found insufficie­nt evidence to file charges. The Pentagon school system told AP it had “no responsive records” on the Mulla case.

Leandra Mulla said neither the Army nor the school offered her any help, such as counseling.

“The military is a great field to be in,” she said. “But they just like to cover up what goes on because they have an expectatio­n and they try to uphold an image.”

How sexual assault reports are handled can hinge on personalit­y and rank. Whether their child is the accused or accuser, higher-ranking families receive more considerat­ion, several former military investigat­ors and lawyers told AP. Supervisor­s with kids of their own were more likely to push an investigat­ion, they said, while in Army offices preoccupie­d with case backlogs investigat­ors would stash less serious allegation­s in a “raw data” file, where they languished.

Regulation­s require that all credible reports of sexual assault be investigat­ed, Army Criminal Investigat­ion Command spokesman Chris Grey said, adding that raw data files are checked for cases that merit a second look.

AP unearthed just over 200 cases missing from records the military and Pentagon school system initially provided when asked about assaults. At least 44 had been criminally investigat­ed.

Some agencies resisted providing all data sources or defined cases in ways that led to undercount­s. Pressed about missing cases, for example, Grey said that data initially released representi­ng “the number of sex crimes reported at installati­ons” in fact reflected a much narrower subset — full investigat­ions “closed” only after an extensive, bureaucrat­ic paperwork process.

Among the missing cases was one in which an Army investigat­or’s step-daughter reported being assaulted in a pool at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. According to the official data provided AP, there were no assaults at that base. The last assault on any Army base in Germany was, according to the records, in 2012 — two years before Mulla reported being attacked. AP also found undisclose­d cases at large military bases in Alaska, Colorado, Texas and Italy, which reported having no or only a few sexual assaults. Unlike many U.S. school districts, Pentagon schools do not publicly share statistics on student sex assaults. Responding to AP’s request for total incidents since the start of 2007, school officials said they had informatio­n only as of fall 2011 and produced documents that showed 67 sexual assault or rape reports through last summer. A review of the school system’s underlying records, though, showed they were in such disarray that, for four years, forms recording sexual assaults were misclassif­ied as “child pornograph­y” reports. Reporters also learned of a separate student informatio­n database that logs student misconduct. After arguing the database could not be analyzed, school system officials released logs showing 157 confirmed cases — mostly fondling and groping — that fit the criteria for a federal felony charge. They acknowledg­ed those records were incomplete. Presented with AP’s findings before publicatio­n, school system officials said their primary incident tracking system “has had some challenges” and acknowledg­ed that the student informatio­n database included “additional cases of interest.”

ELUSIVE JUSTICE

On most bases, the military’s criminal branches investigat­e sex assault reports, and U.S. Justice Department attorneys decide whether to prosecute.

Federal prosecutor­s tend to be “allergic” to any case involving juveniles, said James Trusty, a Washington, D.C., attorney who as a longtime Justice Department section chief advised colleagues considerin­g juvenile prosecutio­ns.

Department policy is that federal prosecutor­s should hand juvenile cases to their local counterpar­ts whenever possible. AP found few military bases where local authoritie­s regularly assumed such cases.

The federal reluctance to prosecute is clear in an AP analysis of about 100 juvenile-on-juvenile sex assault investigat­ions on Navy and Marine Corps bases over the last decade.

Investigat­ors referred 74 cases to federal prosecutor­s who, according to records released to AP, pursued only 11 cases. In contrast, local prosecutor­s were presented with 29 cases and acted on 11.

Cases from overseas bases were almost never prosecuted, including those that came with a confession.

In one unprosecut­ed case, a 14-year-old boy told investigat­ors that over many months he broke into the bedrooms of two girls on an Air Force base in Japan while their families slept. He later recanted an admission that he molested one girl, though records noted video evidence of a sexual assault.

The findings come from more than 600 pages of investigat­ive summaries the Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service released after redacting some details on personal privacy grounds.

One case involved the alleged assaults by the 9-year-old boy at Heroes Elementary on Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune.

Less than 24 hours after the initial report of an assault in the boy’s home, the federal prosecutor on base declined to take the case because of “the age of the parties involved and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the alleged incident,” according to the case file.

That decision came before NCIS agents had interviewe­d the boy. When agents pressed on, they found he’d also fondled kids in school and at a sleepover. Approached again by investigat­ors, the prosecutor stood firm. AP was unable to locate the families involved, and no official would discuss the case.

A Justice Department spokesman said the agency does not comment on how its attorneys select cases. Prosecutio­n rates are not a good way to assess how the system is working, spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle wrote in an email, though he said there was no alternativ­e measure for such “a niche area” as juvenile sex assault cases on bases.

Former prosecutor­s and criminal investigat­ors described to AP a legal netherworl­d in which justice for the children of service members depends on luck and location.

When a call came into the Air Force Office of Special Investigat­ions on bases where Nate Galbreath was a special agent, his first move was to a map. Even bases that are governed by federal law can have nooks where, due to historical quirks and formal or informal agreements, local law enforcemen­t takes the lead.

“It got very complicate­d very quickly,” recalled Galbreath, now the top expert at the Pentagon’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office, which monitors and responds to incidents among service members.

No place illustrate­s the intricate legal terrain quite like Fort Campbell, which as home to the Army’s 101st Airborne Division straddles the Kentucky-Tennessee line. Even though it is a base where federal law prevails, the local court handled some alleged assaults on the Kentucky side. Cases on the Tennessee side were routed to federal prosecutor­s.

There is only one legally bulletproo­f way to move civilian cases from a federal jurisdicti­on base, experts said. It involves a rarely used legal process in which the Pentagon formally transfers jurisdicti­on to local authoritie­s, as has been done at Kentucky’s Fort Knox and Joint Base Lewis-McChord outside Tacoma, Washington.

When prosecutor­s don’t get involved, a base commander may ban an offender from returning, pending therapy, or transfer the family. But commanders don’t have to take any action.

“There’s not necessaril­y any kind of justice, it’s just, ‘You can’t be here anymore,’” said Marcus Williams, a former NCIS investigat­or who now handles discrimina­tion claims, including sex assault reports, at Brigham Young University.

Relocating a kid rather than requiring rehabilita­tive therapy through a court process misses a crucial opportunit­y for reform. The most comprehens­ive research suggests that only 5 percent of juveniles who are arrested for a sex offense will get caught reoffendin­g. Experts worry that when adults do not intervene, children may conclude assaults are acceptable.

The fear of future victims still gnaws at Heather Ryan, who worked as an NCIS investigat­or for more than two years at Camp Lejeune.

In 2011, two sisters, 7 and 9, said their 10-yearold half-brother sexually assaulted them and threatened violence if they talked. The boy confessed.

Ryan worried the boy could become a lifelong offender, but said she struggled to get him help from the military’s vast support structure. Desperate, Ryan persuaded a federal prosecutor to take the case with a plan of forcing the 10-year-old into sex offender treatment in the civilian world.

When the boy stopped cooperatin­g, the case fell apart. His family was later transferre­d to a base in another state. It’s unclear whether he ever received therapy.

“This child needed help. He really, really needed help,” Ryan, who retired from NCIS in 2015, said. “I think of him a lot and wonder how he’s doing, and if he has hurt anybody else.”

 ?? GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This Feb. 7, 2018, photo, shows Leandra Mulla at her home in Tabor City, N.C. As a high school freshman in 2014, Mulla told Army investigat­ors her ex-boyfriend dragged her to a secluded area of their base in Germany and sexually assaulted her. Four...
GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This Feb. 7, 2018, photo, shows Leandra Mulla at her home in Tabor City, N.C. As a high school freshman in 2014, Mulla told Army investigat­ors her ex-boyfriend dragged her to a secluded area of their base in Germany and sexually assaulted her. Four...
 ?? JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Jan. 24, 2018, photo, former Army criminal investigat­or Russell Strand poses for a photo in New York. Strand, a pioneering expert in how the Pentagon addresses sexual assault, estimated that in the Army alone, colleagues passed on opening...
JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Jan. 24, 2018, photo, former Army criminal investigat­or Russell Strand poses for a photo in New York. Strand, a pioneering expert in how the Pentagon addresses sexual assault, estimated that in the Army alone, colleagues passed on opening...
 ?? JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Jan. 24, 2018, photo, Heather Ryan, a former supervisor­y special agent with the Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service, poses for a photo in Wentzville, Mo. An Associated Press investigat­ion found that, a decade after the Pentagon began...
JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Jan. 24, 2018, photo, Heather Ryan, a former supervisor­y special agent with the Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service, poses for a photo in Wentzville, Mo. An Associated Press investigat­ion found that, a decade after the Pentagon began...
 ?? GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Feb. 7, 2018, photo, a cross rests on a bench on the front porch of Leandra Mulla’s home in Tabor City, N.C. As a high school freshman in 2014, Mulla told Army investigat­ors her ex-boyfriend dragged her to a secluded Four area of years their...
GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Feb. 7, 2018, photo, a cross rests on a bench on the front porch of Leandra Mulla’s home in Tabor City, N.C. As a high school freshman in 2014, Mulla told Army investigat­ors her ex-boyfriend dragged her to a secluded Four area of years their...

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