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ARMY PAYS $725 IN SET-ASIDE WORLD WAR II CASE -- A month
after the Army said it made a mistake when it
court-martialed
Samuel Snow and 27 other black soldiers in World
War II,
the Pentagon has cut Mr. Snow a check for back
pay.

Samuel Snow, who was court-martialed
in World War II, at home in Leesburg, Fla., in October. (photo:
Chris Livingston for The New York Times) |
For a previous story about Sam Snow, click
here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfNOV07/nf110407-6.htm
Story here...
http://www.nytimes
.com/2007/12/01/us/01lawton.html?ref=us
Story below:
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More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Army Pays $725 in Set-Aside World War II Case
By WILLIAM YARDLEY
SEATTLE, -- A month after the Army said it made a mistake when it
court-martialed Samuel Snow and 27 other black soldiers in World War II,
the Pentagon has cut Mr. Snow a check for back pay, money withheld while
he served a year in prison on a rioting conviction.
The check was for $725. No interest. No adjustment for inflation.
Mr. Snow, now 83, says $725 is not nearly enough for the anguish he
endured as part of what was possibly the largest Army court-martial of the
war. He has no plans to cash the check.
“I didn’t think it was appropriate,” said Mr. Snow, retired after more
than 40 years of working as a janitor in Florida. “I’m going to ask them
for more or something.”
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In October, an Army board effectively overturned
the convictions of Mr. Snow and the other former soldiers on rioting and
other charges. The men, two of whom are known to survive, were imprisoned
in many cases and dishonorably discharged after a riot at Fort Lawton here
in August 1944 that led to the hanging death of an Italian prisoner of war
held at the post.
The Army Board for Correction of Military Records specifically set aside
the convictions of Mr. Snow and three others whose families requested
reviews of the cases. The board found that the convictions were flawed
because two lawyers defended 43 soldiers, the lawyers had 13 days to
prepare for trial and, most critically, the prosecution withheld important
evidence that could have potentially helped the defendants.
“All rights, privileges and property lost as a result of the conviction
should be restored to him,” the board said of Mr. Snow. Rulings in the
other cases were similar.
Col. Daniel L. Baggio, chief of media relations for the Army, said in an
interview and in e-mail messages that he could not discuss Mr. Snow’s
specific payment because of privacy laws. Colonel Baggio said a private of
Mr. Snow’s grade was paid $50 a month in 1945.
He said Mr. Snow’s $725 appeared to reflect money withheld from his
conviction on Dec. 18, 1944, to what would have been his likely discharge
date, March 2, 1946. In an e-mail message, Colonel Baggio said the law
controlling the board “does not authorize payment of interest, pain and
suffering or damages.” If the back pay had been calculated at 8 percent
for 61 1/2 years, compounded annually, Mr. Snow could have received more
than $80,000. If the $725 was simply adjusted for inflation, it would
amount to more than $7,700, a calculator on the Labor Department Web site
shows.
In 1949, Mr. Snow tried to upgrade his discharge but was rejected by the
records board. He returned in 1975, and his status was upgraded to
“general under honorable conditions,” according to Army documents.
The board determined then that after initially denying involvement, Mr.
Snow confessed to rioting under duress because he had been jailed in a
stockade. Mr. Snow said he received veteran’s health benefits.
Mr. Snow said in a phone interview that the $725 check was accompanied by
a letter that said “if I thought that wasn’t agreeable, don’t cash the
check, because there wouldn’t be no more if I did.”
He said his son planned to look for ways to appeal, including going to his
representative, Corrine Brown, Democrat of Florida. An aide to Ms. Brown
said Friday that she recently met Mr. Snow.
“I know the congresswoman would be concerned about this issue,” Ms.
Brown’s legislative director, Nick Martinelli, said.
It was unclear what other benefits might have been denied to Mr. Snow or
the families of others convicted and what might be available now. Colonel
Baggio said such back payments were uncommon but did not respond to
follow-up questions on additional benefits.
An official of the Defense Finance and Accounting Service, who insisted on
anonymity because he said he was not authorized to speak publicly about
the case, said Mr. Snow could appeal for more pay or benefits. The
official said Mr. Snow was the sole convicted soldier to have been sent a
check.
It was unclear whether the other known survivor, Roy Montgomery of
Illinois, had applied for a review. The review process was ordered by
Congress after a book about the case, “On American Soil,” by Jack Hamann,
a journalist and an author here, was published.
-------------------------
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