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Media Reports

Benderman faces new
trial
|By Eric Ruder
June 10, 2005
SGT. KEVIN Benderman will again face a general court-martial, but the
investigating officer has recommended that the Army dismiss some of the
charges against him.
Last month, as the Army was set to begin Benderman’s trial, a military
judge ruled that a previous investigating officer had been biased
against Kevin during the military’s equivalent of a pretrial hearing.
The judge ordered that Kevin had a right to a new investigating officer
and a new pre-trial hearing.
Seemingly in retaliation, the Army added larceny charges to the existing
charges against Kevin of desertion and missing a deployment--because, it
claimed, Kevin improperly received combat pay. But the Army itself
admits that its own accounting error was at fault--and that more than
100 soldiers at Kevin’s base alone were affected.
The new investigating officer strongly recommended dropping the larceny
charge and advocated qualifying the desertion charge. Unfortunately, the
Army didn’t downgrade the proceedings against Kevin from a general to a
special court-martial. A special court-martial carries a maximum
sentence of one year per charge. In a general court-martial, Kevin could
face a sentence of 10 years or more.
“At the most, the government can prove Sgt. Benderman went home for the
weekend,” said William Cassara, Kevin’s attorney. “When you get past all
the histrionics, this case is about--at most--a three-day [absent
without leave].” The date for the new court martial is expected in the
coming week.
Kevin Benderman is one of a number of soldiers who have resisted the
U.S. war machine from the inside. They need the full support of the
antiwar movement. |