Posted on Oct 28, 2015
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From the Orlando Sentinel:

A second Army recruiter left the armed forces last month in the same sex scandal that ended a colleague's career.

Staff Sgt. Christopher Doner separated from the Army on Sept. 11, three months after fellow recruiter Sgt. John Back left following investigations of their behavior with a 17-year-old Harmony High School student last year, records show.

The Army did not say if they were forced to leave.

"Remember, unless a soldier is separated under the Code of Military Justice, we cannot disclose the type of discharge," said Brian Lepley, a spokesman for the U.S. Army Recruiting Command. "Doner's release from service was through administrative channels and is protected by the federal Privacy Act of 1974."

The recruiters were arrested in December by the Osceola County Sheriff's Office after the girl's parents told investigators about the sexual relationship that began eight months earlier. The teen refused to prosecute after she turned 18 and the criminal cases were dropped, records show.

Doner, then 30, and Back, then 33, earned about $60,000 a year.

Out of 685 Army recruiters working in Florida last year, 10 were charged with sexual misconduct last year, That was an increase of four over 2013, records show.

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-army-recruiter-sex-scandal-osceola-20151006-story.html
Posted in these groups: Armyrecruitposter Recruiter
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Responses: 9
LTC Professor Of Military Science / Department Chair
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One question I have after reading all of that is - what does their yearly earnings have to do with any of that?
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SFC Michael Jackson, MBA
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the Army has made clear its position of zero tolerance for these actions. Recruiters are not allowed to have sex with potential recruits and CERTAINLY NOT underage high school students. They violated the law and USAREC regs that explicitly prohibits the actions. The Army is holding them accountable. GREAT, it should! Really nothing more to say.
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CW3 Eric W. S.
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This was happening before I enlisted over 24 years ago, this is nothing new. That does not make it right, it is just with social media, it is more widely known.
This is just a case of people that have the opportunity at self gratification (mis)using their position to do so.
Until we, as a society and a military reevaluate our recruitment standards and toughen our requirements to enter, we are destined to see more of this. Additionally, if Commanders are not maintaining an accurate and complete working knowledge of every soldier in their command, individuals that want to step out of line are able to do so without immediate consequences. This is unfortunate, but it is reality.
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