AKA, making the US military play by Obama rules.
From Valor Guardians.
A Marine lieutenant colonel found guilty of stealing hundreds of
dollars in merchandise from a base exchange in South Korea has escaped
punishment, according to a published report.
Lt. Col. Samuel K. Lee, 47,
was convicted Sept. 11 at Camp Foster, Okinawa, of two counts of violating
Article 121 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, or larceny of non-military
property valued at $1,000 or less, the military news website Task & Purpose
reported Thursday, citing court records.
Lee, a logistics officer
for Marine Forces Korea, stole a 4K ultra high definition wire-free security
camera system, Apple Airpods with a wireless charging system, Bose
noise-canceling headphones and Estee Lauder ReNutriv Ultimate Diamond energy
cream between Nov. 1, 2019, and March 8, 2020, according to the report, which
cited Marine officials with knowledge of the charges.
A conviction for theft at
or under $1,000 could bring a bad conduct discharge, forfeiture of all pay and
allowances and confinement for one year, according to the manual on courts
martial.
However, the judge in the
case “did not impose punishment,” according to the Corps’ report on
court-martial dispositions for September, “consistent with the plea agreement.”
Lee remains on active duty
and is stationed at Marine Corps Forces Korea, spokesman Capt. Joseph
Butterfield wrote in an email Thursday to Stars and Stripes.
A legal scholar contacted
by Stars and Stripes said Lee escaping punishment is out of the ordinary.
“It is unusual in my mind
that a convening authority would protect an officer from punishment under these
circumstances,” Crista Kraics, a retired Marine Corps judge advocate, told
Stars and Stripes on Thursday by email.
Lee, a former Combat
Logistics Battalion 5 commander, has been in the Marines for more than 23
years, Task & Purpose reported. He earns approximately $10,000 per month,
according to military pay scales posted to the Defense Finance Accounting
Service website.
Kraics said lower enlisted
Marines typically receive harsher punishments than the one rendered in the Lee
case.
“An enlisted Marine at
Special Court Martial, even under a pretrial agreement, would likely receive a
harsher punishment and fewer agreed-upon protections for this level of
larceny,” she said.
Decisions like the one in
the Lee case “absolutely” erode morale, Kraics said.
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