Coast Guard Senior Cadet Charged With Rape

<p><a href="http://my.earthlink.net/article/nat?guid=20060216/43f406d0_3ca6_1552620060216-50981345%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://my.earthlink.net/article/nat?guid=20060216/43f406d0_3ca6_1552620060216-50981345&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Coast Guard Senior Cadet Charged With Rape</p>

<p>NEW LONDON, Conn. - A senior at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy has been charged with sexually assaulting six female cadets in the campus barracks and other sites.</p>

<p>Webster M. Smith, 22, of Houston was separated from the rest of the student population after the first complaint was filed with administrators Dec. 4, the academy said.</p>

<p>Smith, a linebacker on the academy's football team, was charged Feb. 9 under military law with rape, assault, indecent assault and sodomy against female cadets, said Chief Warrant Officer David French, an academy spokesman.</p>

<p>Some of the attacks allegedly happened on academy grounds when Smith entered female cadets' rooms without permission. Others were reported off campus. The rape allegedly occurred in June 2005 during a trip to Annapolis, French said.</p>

<p>A military hearing was tentatively scheduled for March 15 to determine whether there is enough evidence for a trial that could result in a court-martial, French said. Such a military hearing is typically open to the public, but the presiding military official could close it.</p>

<p>After the hearing, the academy's superintendent, Rear Adm. James C. Van Sice, will decide how to proceed.</p>

<p>While separated from other cadets, Smith was not jailed and was allowed to return home for holiday leave. He returned to campus Tuesday and was assigned a work area on academy grounds along the waterfront, an area other cadets are prohibited from entering, the academy said.</p>

<p>"He's no longer in the barracks, and he does not actually stay at the campus at night," French said.</p>

<p>Smith could not be reached for comment Thursday. The academy does not publish a student directory. The cadet watch desk said only that he could not be reached. A message seeking comment from his attorney was left at the Naval Legal Service Office in Groton.</p>

<p>It was unclear whether the alleged victims were under Smith's military command, although seniors have supervisory power over lower-level cadets. French would not release the women's class ranks.</p>

<p>French said there is no recent record of any previous courts-martial at the academy, the smallest federal service academy, with about 980 cadets. About 280 are women, according to its Web site. Male and female cadets share dormitories but have separate rooms.</p>

<p>In 2004, nearly 150 women at the Air Force Academy in Colorado came forward with accusations that they had been sexually assaulted by fellow cadets between 1993 and 2003. Many alleged they were ignored or ostracized by commanders for speaking out. A Pentagon task force found that hostile attitudes and inappropriate treatment of women also persisted at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and at the Naval Academy.</p>

<p>JACK SAUERBy STEPHANIE REITZ (Associated Press Writer)
From Associated Press
February 16, 2006 8:32 PM EST</p>

<p>Such devastating news. And on the heels of the WP cadet charged with theft. However, when you look at how many kids are really at service academies, the negative incidents are really minimal. And any organization will have people who are warped and don't really buy into the honor code. We all know how marvelous these kids are, so I know that I take this pretty hard. I'm betting others do also.</p>

<p>Of course they had to bring the Air Force Academy into this...</p>

<p>Such terriable news... but they have to bring it up at the service academies, even more than the "big three." Its terriable that these things happen...</p>

<p>Yet this sort of thing happens at a state school it barely makes the news. It happened at the Air Force academy (and not here) and it starts a federal inquisition...</p>

<p>Name the state school (no less of comparable size) where 150 women went public with charges of criminal behavior (many of them felonies) and charged that the school administration not only ignored them, but ostracized them for their behavior.</p>

<p>A report of that at a state school would be a front-page story anywhere in the country.</p>

<h1>" In 2004, nearly 150 women at the Air Force Academy in Colorado came forward with accusations that they had been sexually assaulted by fellow cadets between 1993 and 2003. Many alleged they were ignored or ostracized by commanders for speaking out. A Pentagon task force found that hostile attitudes and inappropriate treatment of women also persisted at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and at the Naval Academy."</h1>

<p>The Fowler Commission issued a blistering report to Donald Rumsfeld and to the Senate and House Armed Services Committees. The panel concluded that " ...a serious failure of leadership helped create an environment in which sexual assault became a part of life at the Academy (USAFA)." Moreover, "The panel also accused the earlier Air Force general-counsel investigation of failing to hold anyone accountable and attempting to "shield Air Force Headquarters from public criticism."</p>

<p>There WAS a serious problem at USAFA resulting in a clean sweep of the top administration among other major policy changes. If I remember correctly, the Secretary of the Air Force was also replaced as a result of this problem and failure of leadership.</p>

<p>snipper, I'm shocked that you treat this so lightly. Are you really aware of what actually took place at USAFA? Do you think top administrators at a service academy would lose their jobs if there wasn't a major problem?</p>

<p>
[quote]
Name the state school (no less of comparable size) where 150 women went public with charges of criminal behavior (many of them felonies) and charged that the school administration not only ignored them, but ostracized them for their behavior.

[/quote]

Mini, I think you'd find that the women didn't "go public". The 150 number is, I believe, the result of a comprehensive survey that every single member of the academy was required to complete. Survey responses included items ranging from rape to fondling to name-calling. I've always found it unfortunate that there was no attempt to distinguish between the degree of severity when the 150 number gets tossed around.</p>

<p>Still an unhealthy atmosphere for women that's being actively addressed.</p>

<p>This is very disappointing. I was actually up at New London at USCGA last weekend to visit a friend of mine on my way to NAPS. What i can't figure out is that with such a small campus (the entire campus is about the size of Bancroft+T-court) that nobody would catch wind of this earlier. </p>

<p><a href="http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/02/16/D8FQIFH00.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/02/16/D8FQIFH00.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>"A report of that at a state school would be a front-page story anywhere in the country." </p>

<p>It was front page news at the time. It also was on every evening news channel and they'd reported a follow-up about a month later. Its how I found out about it. Not arguing that it wasn't foul & disgusting, just that the news was there.</p>

<p>Heartbreaking news about CGA & a rude awakening that there are bad apples out there. One bad apple does not make the whole barrel rotten and I hope that this story doesn't create a common belief within the population that service academies breed sexual predators.</p>

<p>West Point had two bad ones last year - guys are now in prison. Sounds similar - <a href="http://www.recordonline.com/archive/2005/02/18/point18.htm%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.recordonline.com/archive/2005/02/18/point18.htm&lt;/a>. Was publicized in NY area. This, I believe, is what lead directly to the "locked doors" policy at academies.</p>

<p>weski- you are correct. It is a terrible reflection on any student body, regardless of whom what where and when.</p>

<p>Yet, the guys are in prison, which I do think reflects well on the system as it played out. There are always a couple bad apples, and while I can only feel for those assaulted, I appreciate that the punishment does seem appropriate. They were not slapped and sent home.</p>

<p>On the CG Thread is an excellent discussion on the particular situation and several other links to more accurate articles. I commend the cadet who wrote in and hope others will visit. <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=148739%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=148739&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY OPE ID: 00289200</p>

<p>The crime data reported by the institutions has not been subjected to independent verification by ED. Therefore, the Department cannot vouch for the accuracy of the data reported here.</p>

<p>Criminal Offenses</p>

<p>Criminal Offenses - On-campus 2002 2003 2004
a. Murder/Non-negligent manslaughter
0 0 0
b. Negligent manslaughter
0 0 0
c. Sex offenses - Forcible
0 0 0
d. Sex offenses - Non-forcible (Include only incest and statutory rape) 0 0 0
e. Robbery
0 0 0
f. Aggravated assault
0 0 1
g. Burglary
2 13 9
h. Motor vehicle theft
0 1 0
i. Arson
1 0 0 </p>

<p>Criminal Offenses - On-campus Residence HallsResidence Halls are a subset of on-campus.
2002 2003 2004
a. Murder/Non-negligent manslaughter
0 0 0
b. Negligent manslaughter
0 0 0
c. Sex offenses - Forcible
0 0 0
d. Sex offenses - Non-forcible (Include only incest and statutory rape) 0 0 0
e. Robbery
0 0 0
f. Aggravated assault
0 0 0
g. Burglary
1 13 3
h. Motor vehicle theft
0 1 0
i. Arson
1 0 0 </p>

<p>Criminal Offenses - Public Property 2002 2003 2004
a. Murder/Non-negligent manslaughter
0 0 0
b. Negligent manslaughter
0 0 0
c. Sex offenses - Forcible
0 0 0
d. Sex offenses - Non-forcible (Include only incest and statutory rape) 0 0 0
e. Robbery
1 0 0
f. Aggravated assault
0 0 0
g. Burglary
1 0 0
h. Motor vehicle theft
0 1 0
i. Arson
0 0 0</p>

<p>NAVY QB CHARGED WITH RAPE</p>

<p><a href="http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=ap-navy-rapecharge&prov=ap&type=lgns%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=ap-navy-rapecharge&prov=ap&type=lgns&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Still much to do folks.</p>

<p>What, is this stuff becoming a PQS line item, now? </p>

<p>Good grief.</p>

<p>haha, way to bump a dead thread</p>