RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS AIR FORCE BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS IN THE MATTER OF: DOCKET NUMBER: BC-2009-00696 COUNSEL: HEARING DESIRED: NO ________________________________________________________________ APPLICANT REQUESTS THAT: He records be corrected to reflect that on 14 February 2006, he was not discharged in lieu of trial by court martial rather he was retired. ________________________________________________________________ APPLICANT CONTENDS THAT: When he submitted his request for discharge in lieu of trial by court-martial he believed it was in the best interest of his family and the Air Force. He was under tremendous stress; however, he had little time to fully contemplate the long-term impact of losing his retirement. In retrospect, it was a wrong decision. He would have retired without a conviction or adverse characterization of his service had the Article 32 investigating officer’s recommendation been followed. Putting him in the position to elect between trial and discharge for relatively minor allegations is unjust. Others similarly situated were allowed to retire without adverse characterization of service even though they were punished under Article 15 or by court- martial. Alcohol got the best of him on occasions; however, that does not justify the harsh disciplinary actions taken against him. His family has suffered immensely, emotionally and financially because of his bad decisions. In support of his request, applicant submits personal statements, a brief prepared by his counsel, a statement/bio from the investigation officer; his request for discharge in Lieu of Trail letter, his DD Forms 214, Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty, his personal data sheet, DD Form 457, Investigation Officers Report and several other documents associated with his request. The applicant’s complete submission, with attachments, is at Exhibit A. ________________________________________________________________ STATEMENT OF FACTS: On 14 December 1984, the applicant entered the Regular Air Force (RegAF). On 4 April 2004, his commander ordered an investigation after receiving a complaint from the applicant’s subordinate that he was engaging in inappropriate sexual behavior. Further investigation revealed that he was also having an unprofessional relationship with a member of his flight. Other female subordinates of his flight stated he maltreated them by making offensive, sexual comments. One airman reported that he touched her breast and buttocks while dancing with her. Another airman maintained that he attempted to kiss her and licked her face. He also provided alcohol to an underage female airman while on a flight outing. On 31 May 2005, charges were preferred. On 2 June 2005, an investigation officer held an Article 32 Hearing and recommended that he receive nonjudicial punishment under Article 15 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). On 11 July 2005, the 18th Air Force Commander (18th AF/CC) referred charges to trial by a general court-martial consisting of violation of Article 92, Failure to Obey an Order or Regulation and Article 93, Cruelty and Maltreatment, for allegedly engaging in an inappropriate relationship with an airman, providing alcoholic beverages to an underage airman and maltreatment of airmen. At the time of the court-martial charges, he was retirement eligible. On 1 September 2005, the applicant’s defense counsel submitted a request for a Chapter 4, Discharge In Lieu of Court Martial. The request was denied and trial was set for 20 November 2005. On 3 February 2006, the government received a renewed request for a Chapter 4, discharge, in which the applicant agreed to forego dual action processing, rendering him ineligible for retirement after over 20 years of service. Effective 14 February 2006, he was discharged for misconduct in the grade of master sergeant with service characterized as Under Other than Honorable Conditions (UOTHC). He served 21 years and 2 months of total active federal military service. ________________________________________________________________ AIR FORCE EVALUATION: AFPC/DPSOR recommends denial. DPSOR states that in a 2 February 2006 memorandum, the applicant specifically did not request dual action process. When a member does not apply for retirement, the Air Force takes action to process the discharge action. His area defense counsel notes "the investigating officer recommended that the applicant be given an Article 15 and be allowed to retire... “ On 3 February 2006, the 6th Air Mobility Wing (AMW) judge advocate reviewed his case and noted ”According to the applicant's own statement he is willing to forgo dual action process which means that he would not be entitled to retirement after over 20 years of service. By approving the Chapter 4 discharge, the government can guarantee that the applicant is discharged with an Under Other than Honorable Condition’s characterization." On 6 February 2006, the 6th AMW/CC recommended discharge in lieu of court-martial to the 18th AF/CC. On 7 February 2006, the 18th AF/CC approved his request for discharge in lieu of trial by court-martial and specified the characterization of service be UOTHC. The applicant was advised of his right to request retirement in lieu of discharge and clearly made the decision to request discharge in lieu of court-martial. He also acknowledged by his signature the character of discharge may be UOTHC. The complete DPSOR evaluation is at Exhibit C. ________________________________________________________________ APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF THE AIR FORCE EVALUATION: The applicant’s counsel states the focus of the advisory opinion is on the claim the applicant gave up the right to dual processing of his request for discharge so he could retire. He was not given a choice for dual processing or retirement. He was told he would go to court-martial or be discharged but the retirement option was not on the table. The heart of their claim is that senior officers facing similar allegations in the same time frame did not face this dilemma and were simply allowed to retire, even if at a lower grade and the advisory opinion did not challenge this point. The complete response is at Exhibit E. ________________________________________________________________ THE BOARD CONCLUDES THAT: 1. The applicant has exhausted all remedies provided by existing law or regulations. 2. The application was timely filed. 3. Insufficient relevant evidence has been presented to demonstrate the existence of an error or injustice. We took notice of the applicant's complete submission in judging the merits of the case; however, based on the available evidence of record, it appears the discharge was consistent with the substantive requirements of the discharge regulation and within the commander's discretionary authority. Counsel’s assertions the applicant was not given a choice for dual processing or retirement and that senior officers facing similar allegations were treated differently and allowed to retire are duly noted; however, as previously stated by DPSOR, the applicant was advised of his right to request retirement in lieu of discharge and made the decision to request discharge in lieu of court-martial. Therefore, we conclude the discharge proceedings were proper and characterization of the discharge was appropriate to the existing circumstances. ________________________________________________________________ THE BOARD DETERMINES THAT: The applicant be notified that the evidence presented did not demonstrate the existence of an error or injustice; that the application was denied without a personal appearance; and that the application will only be reconsidered upon the submission of newly discovered relevant evidence not considered with this application. ________________________________________________________________ The following members of the Board considered BC-2009-00696 in Executive Session on 29 September 2009, under the provisions of AFI 36-2603: , Panel Chair , Member , Member The following documentary evidence was considered: Exhibit A. DD Form 149, dated 11 February 2009, w/atchs. Exhibit B. Applicant's Master Personnel Records. Exhibit C. Letter, AFPC/DPSOR, dated 16 July 2009. Exhibit D. Letter, SAF/MRBR, dated 21 August 2009. Exhibit E. Letter, Counsel, dated 17 September 2009. Panel Chair