[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 97 (Wednesday, June 7, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H4655]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REFORM OUR BROKEN MILITARY JUSTICE SYSTEM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Speier) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SPEIER. Mr. Speaker, for more than 7 years, I have spoken out
against the broken military justice system that allows commanders to
decide how sexual assaults and other criminal offenses are prosecuted
under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Our servicemembers are
stuck in a world where their fates rest within the chain of command,
where bias is king and justice often a jester.
Today, I stand here sick at heart that, once again, a rape conviction
has been overturned because of the broken military justice system. In
this instance, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces threw out
Airman Rodney Boyce's rape and assault conviction because of the
involvement of Lieutenant General Craig Franklin, who referred the case
to court-martial.
This all came about because, in 2013, General Franklin was admonished
by his superiors for tossing out the aggravated sexual assault
conviction of a fellow F-16 pilot, a unanimous decision by a jury of
his peers. Certainly, a general should not have the power to overturn
the findings of a court of law simply because he thinks his buddy could
not possibly have committed the sexual assault.
But because Franklin was appropriately admonished for this abuse of
power, the U.S. Court of Appeals found that his subsequent decision to
move forward with an entirely separate Boyce case constituted unlawful
command influence.
This is made more ridiculous by two facts: first, the military judge
during the actual trial found no evidence of unlawful command
influence; second, the appeals court that threw out the Boyce case also
did not find evidence of unlawful command influence, just the
``appearance'' of it.
So, apparently, unlawful command influence is like pornography: there
is no definition, but judges know it when they see it.
Colleagues, it is past time to reform this unjust system that ignores
jury decisions on the whim of a convening authority. The military must
remove the power to decide whether or not to prosecute sexual assault
cases from the chain of command and give the authority to independent
military prosecutors.
I have met with countless survivors who have suffered in unique and
horrifying ways. There is a hauntingly clear pattern to nearly all of
their experiences: the perpetrator was let off the hook and the victim
fellow servicemember was revictimized by an unjust system, all at the
hands of the chain of command that is supposed to be there to protect
and defend them.
The sense of betrayal by their command is marrow deep and life
altering. Many describe the feelings of this betrayal more akin to a
violation at the hands of a family member rather than a boss or
coworker.
All that we need to do is to allow trained and experienced lawyers in
the military to make a legal judgment about a crime. This in no way
impacts the commander's authority. It simply gives servicemembers what
we civilians take for granted, which is relying on a trained prosecutor
to decide whether to move forward with serious charges of sexual
assault.
Our servicemembers deserve and need a system that they can trust to
be fair and impartial. Letting a convicted rapist walk free because of
a mere appearance of unlawful command influence--forget the fact that
he was, in fact, convicted of the assault--shows just how deep the
problem runs.
As this case shows, the perception and the reality is that commanders
with a built-in conflict of interest and with little or no legal
training are deciding whether to move forward to trial. They make this
decision not solely based on legal reasoning, but a myriad of other
factors--like how well they fly a jet or how well they are liked by
others--that should not be injected into the decisionmaking.
Our servicemembers deserve and need a system that they can trust to
be fair and impartial. We have the power and duty to fundamentally
reform the system to ensure that they are treated with a level of
fairness that befits their sacrifice and service.
Mr. Speaker, the words of one military servicemember still haunt me
and ring in my ears, when she said to me:
I joined the military to fight the enemy. I never thought
that he would be right next to me.
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