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thedrifter
08-30-06, 06:46 AM
Pentagon to monitor recruiters, spurred by abuse reports

By: MARTHA MENDOZA - Associated Press

The Defense Department has announced it will closely monitor military recruiters and their commanders in light of two investigations -- one by the government, the other by The Associated Press -- that found increased levels of recruiter misconduct.

"Through this monitoring we are going to evaluate a command's ability to control, or eliminate, misconduct by military recruiters as well as the actions taken by commands towards those recruiters found to have violated the code of conduct with potential recruits," said Defense Department spokesman Maj. Sean Upton.

Upton said the monitoring will last five to 10 months and that once the Defense Department has enough data and can confirm its integrity, officials will consider changes in policy.

Last week the AP reported that one out of 200 frontline military recruiters -- the ones who deal directly with young people -- was disciplined for sexual misconduct in 2005. The cases ranged from fraternization to forcible rape. Earlier, the Government Accountability Office released a report that showed overall wrongdoing by military recruiters increased from just over 400 cases in 2004 to 630 cases in 2005.

Reaction was swift -- at the Pentagon, on Capital Hill and in some small towns where the story resonated with victims.

"The high rate of sexual misconduct by military recruiters confirms what students and parents have been saying for years military recruiters should not be given unlimited access to high school and college campuses," said Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif.

Stark said the Pentagon's monitoring proposal doesn't go far enough.

"After three GAO reports and an AP investigation into widespread violations, the military should take concrete action to prevent sexual misconduct, not merely bean-count violations."

Several members of the House Armed Services Committee, including the ranking Democrat Rep. Ike Skelton, have called for a new policy that would restrict recruiters from being alone with young women and tougher penalties on those who break the rules.

Several advocacy groups said the crux of the problem is that recruiters are allowed to be alone with the prospective enlistees in closed door meetings, government cars and elsewhere.

Olga Vives, executive vice president of the National Organization for Women, said she was appalled by the reports. She called for the Defense Department to make significant changes.

Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, a group that studies military policies, said consensual but exploitive sex with young women must be discouraged "with firmly enforced rules against military recruiters being alone with civilian girls."

A 19-year-old criminal justice student in Washingtonville, N.Y., was shocked to pick up a newspaper last week and see an AP photograph of the man who raped her three years ago, crying.

"As if everyone should feel sorry for him," she said.

He was Shedrick Hamilton, a 37-year-old former Marine Corps recruiter, serving a 15-month sentence for third-degree rape.

His victim, who spent a year in therapy, said the photo shook her deeply. What he said in an AP interview outraged her: He said he raped her only after she enticed him as a prank.

"Those are lies," said the young woman, who was a 16-year-old high school sophomore at the time.

She said Hamilton preyed on her for months, warning her that no one would believe her if she tried to report him.

Unlike members of Congress or advocacy groups, the young woman was not surprised that she was one of more than 100 substantiated victims of military recruiters in 2005.

In college now, she is training to become a police officer.

"I'm not letting him put me down," she said. "I'm not letting him destroy my life."

Ellie