Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Commentary - My job is prosecuting sexual assault
My job is prosecuting sexual assault

Posted 7/19/2012 Email story   Print story

    


Commentary by Col. Don M. Christensen
Chief, government trial and appellate counsel


7/19/2012 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Here's a simple truth...sexual offenders reject our core values of integrity, service and excellence, in favor of following their own base, undisciplined, criminal desires. Most sexual assaults committed by Airmen are "blue on blue," or Airmen victimizing other Airmen. So in addition to rejecting our core values, these undisciplined Airmen reject the Wingman concept that we prize in the Air Force. They represent a direct threat to unit morale, good order, and discipline. They degrade combat readiness but with the combined efforts of command, law enforcement, and our team of prosecutors, they will be held accountable. Together, as a team, we will protect other Airmen and protect our strength and combat readiness as the world's greatest Air Force.

Detecting and prosecuting sexual assault is our priority. Recently, we posted on the internet significant Air Force sexual assault prosecutions. The posting may be found here: http://www.afjag.af.mil/sexualassaultprosecution/index.asp. As you can tell from a quick review of this information, we will prosecute sexual offenders anywhere they are found. From reviewing these cases, you can see sexual assault in the Air Force carries substantial penalties.

Our partners in AFOSI thoroughly investigate each allegation to provide commanders with timely, accurate, and prosecutable evidence. They pass the ball to commanders, who call upon my team to prosecute the offender to the maximum extent allowed under law.

Our team of prosecutors is better than any you will see in the civilian community or on TV. I have 17 highly skilled senior trial prosecutors, who are selected from among hundreds of judge advocates for their top notch trial skills. They have the very best trial skills in the Air Force JAG Corps. They prosecute the Air Force's most serious courts-martial. Seven of my senior trial prosecutors have been identified as "Special Victim Unit (SVU)" prosecutors, due to their training and experience in combating sexual assault. They are dedicated to bringing justice to victims of sexual assault and ensuring commanders are able to appropriately hold offenders accountable.

In the typical case we prosecute, the accused Airman exploits his victim's intoxicated state to commit the sexual assault. We are very effective in prosecuting these offenders, and the law encourages us to prosecute Airmen who use alcohol to facilitate sexual assault of substantially incapacitated victims. Prosecuting this kind of case is one of our core specialties.

The Air Force has done a great job training Airmen about respecting other Airmen and not sexually abusing their fellow Airmen. Training can reach many Airmen who might be tempted to commit this crime. For others, who cannot be persuaded by training, my team, the Senior Trial Prosecutors - Special Victims Unit, stands at the ready to vindicate the victims.



tabComments
7/26/2012 3:31:59 PM ET
It seems kind of ridiculous how people commiting the same crime get extremely different results punching a female in the face repeatedly and sexaally assaulting her gets 6 months confinement but having intercourse with a female too intoxicated to give consent gets 5 years confinement. There seems to be absolutely no guideline for this and looks to be extremely biased. Is sentencing based upon the public opinion of the criminal Does the AF sentence people by popular demand
Airman, AZ
 
7/24/2012 9:59:45 AM ET
Ah yes AFOSI. The Air Forces own Keystone Kops. How about the time they opened a package without a warrant and then resealed it to protect themsleves Or their comical actions in the still unsolved Heidi Seeman murder. This is what happens when you have an inexperienced untrained and unsupervised detective force who tries to fabricate evidence or tramples the real evidence.
Ret AL, Alabama
 
7/20/2012 3:41:58 PM ET
part 3 of 3 - There are the exceptions but it seems most of the sexual assaults involve people who know each and alcohol. Not talking about strangers who jump out the bushes and the parties are sober. As much as it is true sexual assault is not the victim's fault I would be willing to bet money that fact does not console any victim and the goal is to prevent it in the first place. The other piece to this is to remember our legal system is an adversarial one. I wholeheartedly agree with the Colonel on making sure his lawyers are properly trained to handle and pursue such cases we all know the outcomes are what can be proven and that is not always the same as what happened
MA, LAFB
 
7/20/2012 3:41:05 PM ET
part 2 of 3 - the messed up people ARE educated they shouldn't do these things but they do anyways. Therefore you have to adapt to that fact. There are laws against breaking into houses and cars but we lock and alarm them anyways because we know some people won't obey those laws. How much more careful should we be for something much more horrible like sexual assault...and yet people don't. I know we would like to think that one's fellow Airmen wouldn't do something like this but obviously that is not the case as our AF ends up with some deviant members from society. Just because you can get intoxicated doesn't mean you should. Bad things sexual and non-sexual can happen if you do. This is where people focus on the well they shouldn't but that buys a victim nothing after something does happen.
MA, LAFB
 
7/20/2012 2:07:44 PM ET
I think one of the big problems is every alleged sexual assault falls into one of 3 categories 1 - It happened 2 - It didn't happen 3 - Neither party knows what really happened and have no clue whether they consented or whether they did something they normally would not have done because we all know how well our memory works after intoxication. Problem is all 3 scenarios many times sound just alike and the AF is left to sort it out and ends up one of two outcomes 1- We're overzealously prosecuting or 2 - We're letting people who sexually assault run amok in our AF. I'm sure there are cases where both have happened.The elephant in the room that no one wants to ever talk about is personal responsibility - both men women...all we do is give it lip service. While it is a no-brainer that people should not exploit intoxication,we know there are messed up people who will. This is not a function of being educated...the messed up people ARE educated they shouldn't do these things b
MA, LAFB
 
7/19/2012 9:35:23 PM ET
That is all well and good but when you become too zealous in that effort and convict innocent individuals based soley upon an accuser's statement without any physical evidence or witnesses then the program is flawed. I refer you to a case in point of an Army Green Beret found at www.savethissoldier.com
john, united states
 
7/19/2012 5:49:11 PM ET
After reading the 'Significant Air Force Sexual Assault Convictions 2010-2012' associated with this article I am quite dumbfounded at the rather miniscule and random sentences handed down in apparently similar circumstances. One Airman for obtaining nude pictures from 3 different women without consent get 14 months confinement A BC Discharge and reduction to E-1 while a SSgt gets 20 days confinement loss of 1 stripe and a reprimand for Sexual Assault and Battery. The sentencing seems to be all over the place -- are there no sentencing guidelines None of the confinement periods come close to what the individuals would have received in the civilian judicial system It's no wonder there is a problem in the Air Force. I also noticed that almost every incident involved heavy alcohol consumption on the part of the assaulted airmen. Wise up girls.
Greg Heller, Atlanta GA
 
7/19/2012 5:44:56 PM ET
Several of these individuals were CONVICTED of FORCEABLE rape or aggravated sexual assault and abusive sexual contact and given only a bad-conduct discharge or three months confinement... justice
rrg, TX
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Buccaneers arrive at Red Flag-Alaska

TFSC-SA, myPers website unavailable during scheduled maintenance

Kadena recovers from Typhoon Jelawat  |  VIDEO

Air Force Week in Photos  1

AEDC's newest national space testing asset on its way to mission readiness

Solve problems like an Air Force pilot  7

Active-duty Airmen can pass education benefits to dependents  1

Air Force launches new GPS satellite

Sister-service PME provides valuable joint tool  10

Davis-Monthan, Spangdahlem earn top lodging honors

Through Airmen's Eyes: Building partnerships by building a school

Discovery Channel series highlights C-17  1

Elmendorf P38 Lightning  6

Welsh honors two Airmen from AFMAO  1

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Standards? What standards?   2

First things first: Get your degrees in order  26


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing