Posted on Nov 8, 2017
CH (COL) Geoff Bailey
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Botched Air Force handling of Texas shooter's criminal history may be 'systemic' issue

The latest report on the Texas shooter cites systemic issues and laziness/apathy regarding procedural requirements.
Posted in these groups: Leadership abstract 007 LeadershipOriginal Crime
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CW4 Guy Butler
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I suppose it could be characterized that way. The systemic is easy - there is no charge characterization in Article 128 that ties directly to domestic violence (for example, the word “spouse”). The lazy/apathy might fit into the clerk not reading the entire proceedings to determine whether or not the Lautenberg Amendment applies. While it does include assault on a child under 16, there’s still no tie-in to whether it’s domestic.

Link to Article 128:

https://www.thebalance.com/punitive-articles-of-the-ucmj-3356842
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SP5 Peter Keane
SP5 Peter Keane
7 y
Capt Gregory Prickett - Actually it does. Family Violence.
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SMSgt Thor Merich
SMSgt Thor Merich
7 y
The issue is actually much simpler then the translation of crimes, although that is also a factor. The Air Force OSI (Office of Special Investigations) is required to enter criminal conviction information into NICS. However, it never happened in this case. Most likely because of overworked staff and that type of administrative work is not a priority for the Air Force and the rest of the DOD.

This type of mistake occurs on a regular basis all across the DOD. Maybe now, the DOD will make this a priority.
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SP5 Peter Keane
SP5 Peter Keane
7 y
Well goood for you, but when an offense is automatically enhanced when against a family member, that becomes part of the charge.
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SP5 Peter Keane
SP5 Peter Keane
7 y
I didn't say anything about punishments. If assualt on a family member is not put forward as a felony, someone is failing to do their duty, be that the police department or the da
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SMSgt Thor Merich
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This is a huge DOD wide issue that has been going on for years. The problem mostly lies with translation of UCMJ crimes into civilian world crimes. On the civilian side there are misdemeanors and felonies. The UCMJ does not have such a distinction. There are volumes of actions that can lead to punishment in the military that do not exist in the civilian world.

Many crimes and incidents that happen while in the military never get reported outside of military channels. To be honest, most of them never should be reported. The military and civilian worlds are two different worlds.

However, some crimes committed by military folks need to be reported and documented properly so that record follows the person just as it would in the civilian world. Until now, the military has been lazy about documenting such incidents as its really not important to them. What happens to someone after they get out doesn't concern the DOD. Also, there is only so much time and money in the budget. Making sure someone's military crimes get documented in the civilian record system is simply not a priority.
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SFC Founder
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Somewhere the Air Force dropped the ball on this loser, and maybe this tragedy could've been prevented.
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