• Re: California's top military brass rocked by homophobia, antisemitism,

    From Lock The FAGGOTS UP Like We Did The@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Sun Jul 17 09:32:48 2022
    XPost: alt.abortion, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.hollywood
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <ru9jf6$1eee$2@neodome.net>
    <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

    Only believe CNN!

    A top general in the California National Guard violated
    government rules by having subordinates ferry his mother on a
    shopping trip, perform other personal errands for him and
    complete a part of his cybersecurity training.

    A second general allegedly made antisemitic and homophobic
    remarks, including that Jews are unrepentant sinners and that
    gay marriage is a reason terrorists attack the United States.

    And a colonel who serves as a Guard finance officer and had been
    recommended for promotion to general has been charged with
    exposing himself to three women in a restaurant.

    Those are among the latest embarrassing episodes to tarnish the
    Guard, a branch of the California Military Department that has
    been beset in recent years by allegations of cover-ups and
    retaliation against whistleblowers, a Times investigation based
    on Guard documents and interviews has found.

    Current and former Guard members say there is a widespread
    perception in the organization that high-ranking officers who
    engage in misconduct are protected from significant discipline.

    One of the generals found by an internal inquiry to have
    committed acts of wrongdoing was issued a letter of
    admonishment, and the other received a letter of reprimand,
    according to the Guard. After The Times began inquiring about
    their cases in recent weeks, the Guard said one general resigned
    and the other faces new discipline that has yet to be
    determined. There are 13 generals in the California Military
    Department, and four have been caught up in controversies since
    2019.

    “When these things happen, the higher-ups cover for each other.
    And without public exposure of these things, there would be
    absolutely no real punishment,” said Dan Woodside, a retired
    Guard major and fighter pilot who has publicly criticized the
    organization’s leadership. “We need an overhaul of the entire
    system.”

    Interviews and Guard records reviewed by The Times show that
    other allegations of misconduct include:

    – A captain allegedly referred to a Latino sergeant as a “lazy
    Mexican” and harassed an African American soldier because he was
    a “Black Lives Matter guy.” Another captain has been accused of
    asking a Jewish soldier if cigar ashes were his “relatives.”
    Both captains allegedly falsified physical fitness
    certifications for Guard members.

    – A wing commander for the air side of the Guard faces
    complaints that she used a military credit card to buy cleaning
    supplies for her dog and had underlings walk the pet at work.

    – The vice wing commander at the same air station was grounded
    because of a drunk driving arrest.

    In response to Times queries, the Guard said all of the
    allegations and incidents are or were the subject of internal
    investigations. Maj. Gen. David Baldwin, who has headed the
    Guard throughout the years of scandal and turmoil, declined to
    be interviewed. In an emailed statement, he said that “when we
    do have allegations of misconduct, we take them seriously and
    address them in accordance with applicable law and regulation,
    safeguarding due process rights of all concerned.”

    Baldwin reports to Gov. Gavin Newsom, who declined to comment, a
    spokesperson said.

    The 20,000-member Guard serves a dual state-and-federal mission
    that includes responding to emergencies in California, such as
    earthquakes, wildfires and civil disturbances, and assisting
    U.S. armed forces in military operations overseas. Baldwin has
    been adjutant general of the Guard since 2011, when he was
    appointed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown.

    In 2019, Baldwin removed the commander of the Air National
    Guard, Maj. Gen. Clay Garrison, amid complaints of reprisals
    against whistleblowers and allegations of a cover-up of
    misconduct that reached into the highest ranks of the
    organization. The complaints, which were disclosed by The Times,
    focused on the leadership of the Fresno air base and included an
    alleged cover-up of an incident in which someone urinated in a
    female Guard member’s boots. The commander of the 144th Fighter
    Wing there was also removed.

    In 2020, in response to another Times report, Newsom’s office
    denounced the Guard’s decision to send a military spy plane to
    suburban El Dorado Hills, where Baldwin lived, to help civilian
    authorities monitor demonstrations over the police killing of
    George Floyd. Baldwin said the fact that he resided in El Dorado
    Hills, where the protests were small and peaceful, had no
    bearing on the deployment of the RC-26B reconnaissance plane.

    Last year, Baldwin fired Garrison’s successor, Maj. Gen. Gregory
    Jones, and suspended Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Magram with pay as
    director of the air staff and reassigned him to human resources
    and humanitarian duties. Those actions followed a Times report
    that Guard members were concerned that their leaders had readied
    an F-15C fighter jet in 2020 for a possible mission in which the
    aircraft would fly low over civilian protesters to frighten and
    disperse them. Baldwin denied that the jet had been prepared for
    such a deployment and said the moves against Jones and Magram
    had nothing to do with the report.

    Magram, who has been a member of Baldwin’s inner circle as an
    assistant adjutant general, is the focus of one of the Guard’s
    latest upheavals.

    According to interviews and a confidential report obtained by
    The Times, the U.S. Air Force inspector general conducted an
    investigation into conduct by Magram over a period of seven
    years ending in 2020. The investigation was completed last year
    but has never been made public.

    A heavily redacted inspector general’s report reviewed by The
    Times states that the inquiry grew out of complaints by a woman
    in the Guard that, among other allegations, Magram stopped
    consulting her on inquiries into misconduct, which was part of
    her duties, and abused his authority. The woman’s name is
    redacted in the report.

    Magram denied the allegations in written statements to the
    inspector general, the report says. The investigation determined
    that he did not inappropriately limit the woman’s role in
    investigations, according to the report. He was also accused of
    requiring subordinates to pick up documents he placed on the
    floor for shredding, and the report states that he was counseled
    about the practice and stopped it.

    The investigation found that Magram had on-duty Guard members
    drive him up to 120 miles round-trip to personal dental and
    medical appointments at Travis Air Force Base, according to the
    report. The document quoted one unnamed Guard member as saying
    he did not want to drive Magram because “my job is to take care
    of the airmen in the state of California and not be a chauffeur
    for a general.”

    A Guard member who took Magram’s mother shopping was quoted in
    the report as saying that “she was particular. When I say
    particular, it had to be at Whole Foods. … It just took her a
    long time to decide what she wanted, a lot of comparison
    shopping amongst products.”

    The report says the Guard member feared her career would suffer
    if she declined Magram’s request to “cart around” his mother:
    “If you were not on his good side, then, um, yeah, he would kind
    of discard or try to make sure that you were kind of put to the
    side,” the member is quoted as saying. She said Magram also had
    her drive him to his credit union to get money for someone’s
    birthday card, according to the report.

    Magram generally confirmed the members’ accounts of running
    errands for him, according to the report. He said he believed
    subordinates giving him rides to medical appointments was
    consistent with the Air Force’s “wingman concept,” in which
    Guard members look out for one another. “I want to reiterate
    that had I ever heard of any ethics issues like this from
    subordinates, peers or commanders, or perceptions of such, I
    would have corrected or addressed it on the spot,” Magram said
    in a statement to the inspector general.

    However, Magram had been counseled in 2017 that tasking Guard
    members for rides to personal appointments was inappropriate,
    the report states, adding that his wingman argument “rings
    hollow.” The investigation similarly faulted him for using an
    underling to work on his travel awards accounts, including for
    personal trips.

    And the inquiry determined that Magram failed to complete his
    annual cybersecurity training and thus had subordinates each day
    request that headquarters temporarily restore his computer
    access. This went on for about two weeks, until he had the
    training finished by a subordinate. Magram said in his statement
    that he was late in completing the training because of “a
    tremendously busy operational tempo.”

    Magram did not respond to interview requests. In a statement to
    The Times, Lt. Col. Brandon Hill, a Guard spokesperson, said the
    Air Force issued a letter of admonishment to Magram as a result
    of the inspector general investigation. Such a letter is a
    lesser form of punishment than a letter of reprimand. In
    Magram’s case, Hill said, the letter is not “career-ending.”

    After further Times queries, however, the Guard said a second
    investigation of Magram by a state inspector general
    substantiated similar allegations against him, and he awaits
    another round of discipline.

    Meanwhile, according to confidential Guard records reviewed by
    The Times and interviews with four people familiar with the
    incidents, a chief warrant officer alleged that Brig. Gen. David
    Hawkins, in an apparent state of irritation, charged toward her
    at Guard headquarters, causing her to fall backward and into a
    wall.

    Hill said in an email to The Times that an in-house
    investigation by two other generals “did not substantiate this
    allegation,” a conclusion reached in January.

    Hill would not provide details on how the inquiry determined the
    accusation could not be substantiated. Hawkins told The Times
    the incident “did not happen.” The chief warrant officer, Lori
    Sandes, declined to be interviewed.

    An internal inquiry substantiated the allegations that Hawkins
    made the slurs about Jews and gay people, and he received a
    letter of reprimand as a result, Hill said.

    Responding to a subsequent Times query, Hill confirmed that
    Hawkins had resigned.

    Hawkins told The Times that “those allegations are largely
    untrue,” and he specifically denied making the statement about
    terrorist attacks. He said he believed the allegations were
    lodged by someone who overheard and misconstrued a conversation
    he had with a chaplain.

    “At no time was there any characterization of any kind that was
    meant to defame,” Hawkins said. Asked if he was forced to
    resign, he replied, “I would not comment on that. It’s just time
    for me to move on.”

    The Guard’s troubles extended well beyond the California state
    line. Col. Jonathan Cartwright was arrested in March on
    suspicion of exposing himself to three women at a restaurant in
    Arlington County, Va. Police booked Cartwright on a misdemeanor
    charge, and he was released from jail on his promise to appear
    in court. A hearing is scheduled for July.

    Hill said Cartwright had been recommended for promotion to
    general. The colonel, he said, remains on active duty but has
    been barred from Guard properties until his criminal case is
    resolved. Hill referred other questions about Cartwright to the
    National Guard Bureau in Washington, D.C., because he is part of
    its chain of command. A bureau spokesperson declined to comment,
    and it was unclear how the criminal case might affect his
    proposed promotion. Cartwright did not respond to interview
    requests.

    Closer to home, an internal complaint accused Capt. Brandon
    Hamilton of telling members of the State Guard, a branch of the
    California Military Department made up of volunteers, that a
    Latino sergeant was a “lazy Mexican” in part because he resisted
    a directive to return to field duty after being hospitalized and
    then isolated with COVID-19, two sources told The Times.
    Hamilton allegedly targeted a Black sergeant for harassment and
    retaliation after labeling him a “Black Lives Matter guy,”
    according to these sources, who requested anonymity because they
    feared they would be punished for speaking out.

    The alleged mistreatment of the Black sergeant included unfairly
    critiquing his work and preventing him from completing a search-
    and-rescue course and then disciplining him for it, the sources
    said.

    The officer accused of uttering the slur about ashes to a Jewish
    soldier is Capt. Marc Gates, according to the sources and
    internal records examined by The Times. Gates and Hamilton also
    are alleged to have falsified physical fitness certifications
    for Guard members by recording run times for them for runs that
    never occurred, the interviews and records show.

    The Guard declined to release information on the allegations
    against Hamilton and Gates because they are still under
    investigation, officials said. Hamilton and Gates did not
    respond to interview requests. Neither did the Latino and Black
    sergeants — Jeremy Hernandez and Prezell Harris, respectively —
    nor the Jewish soldier, Jesse Poller.

    The commander of the Guard’s 146th Airlift Wing at Channel
    Islands, Col. Lisa Nemeth, has been accused of having
    subordinates tend to her dog and buy a carpet scrubber and
    cleaning solution for the pet with a government purchase card.
    The Guard said the allegations are under investigation and
    officials declined to comment further. Nemeth declined to
    comment.

    The vice commander of the 146th wing was charged with drunk
    driving in March 2021. Col. Bill Green was grounded the day
    after the incident and underwent a required evaluation for
    longer-term alcohol or drug abuse, according to records and
    interviews. He received a letter of reprimand, but a commander
    allowed him to eventually resume flying missions. Baldwin
    ordered him grounded again, and had an investigation launched
    into whether Green had received preferential treatment. The
    results of that inquiry have not been disclosed.

    Green, who retired from the Guard in February, told The Times
    that he was fully accountable for his conduct. “I believe I met
    my responsibilities that came with that,” he said. “I had a
    series of penalties to pay as a result of my actions. I’m
    grateful for the time I served. I know of no preferential or
    unfair treatment in my case.”

    In his statement to The Times, Baldwin said, “If, after a
    federal and/or state investigation, allegations are
    substantiated, then this command and/or the relevant federal
    entity takes appropriate action. The bottom line is we have an
    effective system in place that deals with allegations of
    inappropriate behavior.”

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-06-23/new-scandals- rock-california-national-guards-highest-ranks

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