thedrifter
07-18-04, 12:47 PM
Fake 'Generals' volunteer for honors
Paramilitary awards stars
(This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press on Friday, May 21, 2004.)
By DENNIS ANDERSON and WILLIAM P. WARFORD, Valley Press Staff Writers
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PALMDALE - Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Ryan White believed he was seated at the
VIP table, in the company of a brigadier general from the Marine Corps and a lieutenant general from the Army.
The occasion was this past weekend's "Pride of the Nation," a salute to all U.S. armed forces put on by hundreds of Lancaster High School students who provided hundreds more guests with a spectacular display of patriotism and national unity at Air Force Plant 42.
Staff Sgt. White, the guest of honor, spoke to all assembled, delivering a vivid, first-hand account of the Marines' assault on Baghdad and the night last year when he took a round through the boot and his foot that earned him a righteous Purple Heart along with a trip to the field hospital.
He proferred his salute and courtesies to Brig. Gen. Ollie M. McCaulley, who was wearing resplendent dress blues and a white dress cap replete with "scrambled eggs." The wounded veteran also saluted the senior officer at the table, Lt. Gen. Allen A. Baumann, a Vietnam Green Beret and infantry commander with the famed 101st Airborne Division.
White, a Los Angeles police officer in the Marine Corps Reserve, said he believed he was in the presence of people who attained their generals' stars in the service.
"I felt honored to sit at their table," White recalled. "I was under the impression I was seated with a lieutenant general and a Marine Corps brigadier."
Later, he learned that the ranks Baumann and McCaulley honored themselves with were not conferred by the Army or Marine Corps, by the Reserve, or National Guard.
Their collar rank flows from the civilian paramilitary volunteer organization founded by Baumann, who serves as its "commanding general."
McCaulley served in the Marine Corps, but never as an officer. He was honorably discharged at the rank of E-5 "buck" sergeant in the late 1970s. His active service was a generation ago.
Baumann was a decorated officer with special operations and extensive Aiborne paratrooper background. In his early 60s, he is trim, fit and cuts a dashing figure.
But his last rank in the Army was lieutenant colonel. It's a respectable rank, but nowhere near the three stars worn by the likes of Ulysses S. Grant, George S. Patton, or more recently Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who commands forces in Iraq, or, for that matter, Lt. Gen. Richard V. Reynolds, who went on from Edwards Air Force Base to the Air Force Materiel Command.
Baumann and McCaulley say the stars they wear on their collars and epaulets is the legitimate rank they hold with a group called the U.S. Volunteer Reserve, which Baumann founded some years ago.
The organization has no affiliation with the Army or Marines or any branch of active service, and also has no connection to the National Guard, the Reserves, or the state component, the California State Military Reserve.
The nonprofit paramilitary civilian outfit, Baumann maintains, serves to provide "full military honors" funerals to deceased veterans.
Baumann appears frequently at military and patriotic gatherings, wearing the three-star rank, and contends he has the right to do so because of a small pin, "USV," affixed atop his right breast pocket, and because of a USV shoulder patch he wears on his left shoulder below a "Special Forces" flash.
"It's supposed to look like a regular uniform," Baumann said, explaining that USV should wear something very like regulation uniforms in order to honor deceased veterans and give grieving relatives the sense that they are attending a military honors funeral.
An Army spokesman reached Wednesday at Headquarters, Department of the Army, at the Pentagon, examined photographs of Baumann in his regalia and concluded that wearing such rank violated propriety.
Maj. Steve Stover acknowledged Baumann's service as an officer and in special operations before his retirement. Then he said what the retired lieutenant colonel was doing was wrong.
"While I respect (Lt.) Col. Baumann's service, both to the Army and his nation, I think it does deceive the public," Stover said in a telephone interview from HQDA in Virginia.
Stover added, "the rank of lieutenant general is unearned because it is not a rank he attained in service to his country."
Lt. Col. Drew Crane, acting as senior officer for the Marine Corps aviation unit at Edwards Air Force Base, drew the same conclusion about McCaulley's dress blues with a star on the collar.
"If you're a sergeant, or a corporal or a lieutenant, or whatever, you don't put a star on your shoulder. You can't just go out and buy a uniform and appoint yourself a general."
Crane related that he had received inquiries from staff and base personnel about honors to accord to a visiting general. McCaulley and Baumann have attended recent functions at Edwards Air Force Base wearing their self-designated ranks and uniforms. Crane researched the matter.
"He is not a general," Crane said of McCaulley.
In researching McCaulley's wearing of the uniform, Crane found a Web site from when McCaulley ran for state Assembly a few years ago. The Web site displays a Marine dress blue uniform with sergeant's stripes and a picture of McCaulley. While McCaulley did attain sergeant's rank, "use of Marine Corps paraphernalia in a political endorsement is prohibited," Crane said.
McCaulley said he had researched the matter and believed it was legal.
McCaulley and Baumann enjoy high-profile political and civic positions within the Antelope Valley. Both serve on Palmdale's city commission for aerospace, and Baumann serves in leadership positions on the Joint Military Affairs Committees of the Palmdale and the Antelope Valley Chambers of Commerce. Both have run for City Council and McCaulley is active in Republican Party activities.
"Allen should know better than this," said Steve Malicott, president-CEO of the Antelope Valley Chambers of Commerce (Lancaster-Rosamond). Malicott is also a former Air Force chief master sergeant with 26 years' service. "Ollie should know better, too. I think this is atrocious. It embarrasses me as a military retiree."
On Thursday, McCaulley responded to queries raised by the Antelope Valley Press by writing to the U.S. Marine Corps Judge Advocate Division at the Pentagon. The correspondence, copied to the Valley Press, was not directed to a specific individual at Marine Corps HQ.
Noting the questions raised about his rank by the Valley Press, as well as community and military leaders such as Malicott and Crane, McCaulley said in his letter to "Good Sir" that he was seeking guidance about the legality of wearing a Marine dress uniform with general's rank, as permitted by the U.S. Volunteers organization founded by Baumann.
Responding to the queries, McCaulley wrote in his letter to USMC's legal division: "I asked all the members of my command regardless of branch to stand down."
McCaulley wrote that before the membership of USV under his "command" perform another final military honors funeral, "we must ensure that the USMC VR (volunteer reserve) are not breaking any laws." He said about 40 Marine veterans are in his "command."
McCaulley noted that Baumann directed him to "stand up" the Marine Corps element of U.S. Volunteers last year. That mission, he said, propelled him from the rank of USV lieutenant colonel late last year to brigadier general more recently.
"It is the belief of our members that we were following the guidelines of Chapters 1, 7 and 11 of the Marine Corps Uniform Regulations. My group will be informing all of the cemeteries including Riverside National that we can no longer perform any (military funeral) honors until it is explained to us how we can wear our uniforms or even if we have a legal right to wear
them," McCaulley wrote.
Scott White, a former Palmdale Chamber of Commerce president, observed, "He was a colonel at Christmas."
McCaulley, a neighbor, and Baumann, a chamber colleague, recruited Gulf War veteran White for USV, but he said he went to one meeting "at a rec room in a trailer park," and concluded, "It wasn't for me."
Baumann said he has no intention of shedding his rank as "Commanding General, U.S. Volunteers-Joint Services Command."
Proud of his Vietnam service, and proud of his accomplishments during his active service career, he said that he is confident the accoutrements he wears on his uniform put him in the clear.
"I am appalled that people would stand here today when we need volunteers, that they would be opposed to veterans being buried by an organization that is legal in every respect.
Nothing we are doing is illegal. We have been investigated by the FBI and everybody else. No one has said we are illegal. We have broken no laws."
Rather, Baumann said the U.S. Volunteers' quest to get official recognition by the government or by the military is so his organization can become "a force multiplier" for helping out at military funerals.
continued............
Paramilitary awards stars
(This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press on Friday, May 21, 2004.)
By DENNIS ANDERSON and WILLIAM P. WARFORD, Valley Press Staff Writers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
PALMDALE - Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Ryan White believed he was seated at the
VIP table, in the company of a brigadier general from the Marine Corps and a lieutenant general from the Army.
The occasion was this past weekend's "Pride of the Nation," a salute to all U.S. armed forces put on by hundreds of Lancaster High School students who provided hundreds more guests with a spectacular display of patriotism and national unity at Air Force Plant 42.
Staff Sgt. White, the guest of honor, spoke to all assembled, delivering a vivid, first-hand account of the Marines' assault on Baghdad and the night last year when he took a round through the boot and his foot that earned him a righteous Purple Heart along with a trip to the field hospital.
He proferred his salute and courtesies to Brig. Gen. Ollie M. McCaulley, who was wearing resplendent dress blues and a white dress cap replete with "scrambled eggs." The wounded veteran also saluted the senior officer at the table, Lt. Gen. Allen A. Baumann, a Vietnam Green Beret and infantry commander with the famed 101st Airborne Division.
White, a Los Angeles police officer in the Marine Corps Reserve, said he believed he was in the presence of people who attained their generals' stars in the service.
"I felt honored to sit at their table," White recalled. "I was under the impression I was seated with a lieutenant general and a Marine Corps brigadier."
Later, he learned that the ranks Baumann and McCaulley honored themselves with were not conferred by the Army or Marine Corps, by the Reserve, or National Guard.
Their collar rank flows from the civilian paramilitary volunteer organization founded by Baumann, who serves as its "commanding general."
McCaulley served in the Marine Corps, but never as an officer. He was honorably discharged at the rank of E-5 "buck" sergeant in the late 1970s. His active service was a generation ago.
Baumann was a decorated officer with special operations and extensive Aiborne paratrooper background. In his early 60s, he is trim, fit and cuts a dashing figure.
But his last rank in the Army was lieutenant colonel. It's a respectable rank, but nowhere near the three stars worn by the likes of Ulysses S. Grant, George S. Patton, or more recently Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who commands forces in Iraq, or, for that matter, Lt. Gen. Richard V. Reynolds, who went on from Edwards Air Force Base to the Air Force Materiel Command.
Baumann and McCaulley say the stars they wear on their collars and epaulets is the legitimate rank they hold with a group called the U.S. Volunteer Reserve, which Baumann founded some years ago.
The organization has no affiliation with the Army or Marines or any branch of active service, and also has no connection to the National Guard, the Reserves, or the state component, the California State Military Reserve.
The nonprofit paramilitary civilian outfit, Baumann maintains, serves to provide "full military honors" funerals to deceased veterans.
Baumann appears frequently at military and patriotic gatherings, wearing the three-star rank, and contends he has the right to do so because of a small pin, "USV," affixed atop his right breast pocket, and because of a USV shoulder patch he wears on his left shoulder below a "Special Forces" flash.
"It's supposed to look like a regular uniform," Baumann said, explaining that USV should wear something very like regulation uniforms in order to honor deceased veterans and give grieving relatives the sense that they are attending a military honors funeral.
An Army spokesman reached Wednesday at Headquarters, Department of the Army, at the Pentagon, examined photographs of Baumann in his regalia and concluded that wearing such rank violated propriety.
Maj. Steve Stover acknowledged Baumann's service as an officer and in special operations before his retirement. Then he said what the retired lieutenant colonel was doing was wrong.
"While I respect (Lt.) Col. Baumann's service, both to the Army and his nation, I think it does deceive the public," Stover said in a telephone interview from HQDA in Virginia.
Stover added, "the rank of lieutenant general is unearned because it is not a rank he attained in service to his country."
Lt. Col. Drew Crane, acting as senior officer for the Marine Corps aviation unit at Edwards Air Force Base, drew the same conclusion about McCaulley's dress blues with a star on the collar.
"If you're a sergeant, or a corporal or a lieutenant, or whatever, you don't put a star on your shoulder. You can't just go out and buy a uniform and appoint yourself a general."
Crane related that he had received inquiries from staff and base personnel about honors to accord to a visiting general. McCaulley and Baumann have attended recent functions at Edwards Air Force Base wearing their self-designated ranks and uniforms. Crane researched the matter.
"He is not a general," Crane said of McCaulley.
In researching McCaulley's wearing of the uniform, Crane found a Web site from when McCaulley ran for state Assembly a few years ago. The Web site displays a Marine dress blue uniform with sergeant's stripes and a picture of McCaulley. While McCaulley did attain sergeant's rank, "use of Marine Corps paraphernalia in a political endorsement is prohibited," Crane said.
McCaulley said he had researched the matter and believed it was legal.
McCaulley and Baumann enjoy high-profile political and civic positions within the Antelope Valley. Both serve on Palmdale's city commission for aerospace, and Baumann serves in leadership positions on the Joint Military Affairs Committees of the Palmdale and the Antelope Valley Chambers of Commerce. Both have run for City Council and McCaulley is active in Republican Party activities.
"Allen should know better than this," said Steve Malicott, president-CEO of the Antelope Valley Chambers of Commerce (Lancaster-Rosamond). Malicott is also a former Air Force chief master sergeant with 26 years' service. "Ollie should know better, too. I think this is atrocious. It embarrasses me as a military retiree."
On Thursday, McCaulley responded to queries raised by the Antelope Valley Press by writing to the U.S. Marine Corps Judge Advocate Division at the Pentagon. The correspondence, copied to the Valley Press, was not directed to a specific individual at Marine Corps HQ.
Noting the questions raised about his rank by the Valley Press, as well as community and military leaders such as Malicott and Crane, McCaulley said in his letter to "Good Sir" that he was seeking guidance about the legality of wearing a Marine dress uniform with general's rank, as permitted by the U.S. Volunteers organization founded by Baumann.
Responding to the queries, McCaulley wrote in his letter to USMC's legal division: "I asked all the members of my command regardless of branch to stand down."
McCaulley wrote that before the membership of USV under his "command" perform another final military honors funeral, "we must ensure that the USMC VR (volunteer reserve) are not breaking any laws." He said about 40 Marine veterans are in his "command."
McCaulley noted that Baumann directed him to "stand up" the Marine Corps element of U.S. Volunteers last year. That mission, he said, propelled him from the rank of USV lieutenant colonel late last year to brigadier general more recently.
"It is the belief of our members that we were following the guidelines of Chapters 1, 7 and 11 of the Marine Corps Uniform Regulations. My group will be informing all of the cemeteries including Riverside National that we can no longer perform any (military funeral) honors until it is explained to us how we can wear our uniforms or even if we have a legal right to wear
them," McCaulley wrote.
Scott White, a former Palmdale Chamber of Commerce president, observed, "He was a colonel at Christmas."
McCaulley, a neighbor, and Baumann, a chamber colleague, recruited Gulf War veteran White for USV, but he said he went to one meeting "at a rec room in a trailer park," and concluded, "It wasn't for me."
Baumann said he has no intention of shedding his rank as "Commanding General, U.S. Volunteers-Joint Services Command."
Proud of his Vietnam service, and proud of his accomplishments during his active service career, he said that he is confident the accoutrements he wears on his uniform put him in the clear.
"I am appalled that people would stand here today when we need volunteers, that they would be opposed to veterans being buried by an organization that is legal in every respect.
Nothing we are doing is illegal. We have been investigated by the FBI and everybody else. No one has said we are illegal. We have broken no laws."
Rather, Baumann said the U.S. Volunteers' quest to get official recognition by the government or by the military is so his organization can become "a force multiplier" for helping out at military funerals.
continued............