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RESPECTED MARINE LAWYER ALLEGES MILITARY INJUSTICES --
He saw one of the biggest potential problems that
can prevent
service members from getting a fair trial -- the
senior officer on the
jury tried to order everybody else how to decide
the verdict.

Lt. Col. Colby Vokey decided to join
the Marine Corps when he was a teenager because he wanted "to be one
of the best." (photo: Daniel Zwerdling / NPR) |
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Story below:
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-------------------------
Respected Marine Lawyer Alleges Military
Injustices
by Daniel Zwerdling
All Things Considered -- By all accounts, Colby Vokey is a model officer
in the U.S. Marine Corps, at one point helping command an artillery unit
in Kuwait during the Gulf War in 1991.
For the past four years, Vokey has served as chief of all the Corps'
defense lawyers in the western United States — and he's played a key role
in some of the military's most sensitive legal issues, including the
murder investigation in Haditha, Iraq, and in the debate about detainees
at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay.
"Colby Vokey?" muses retired Col. Jane Siegel "Integrity almost seems like
a word too small to describe him."
Says Lt. Col. Matthew Cord, "He's just one of the best."
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So when Vokey announced recently that he wanted
to leave the Corps, it said something troubling about the military system
of justice that he's served for almost 20 years. Vokey charges that some
commanders and officials in the Bush administration have abused the system
of justice, and he's going to retire from the Corps May 1, 2008.
People who know him say that privately, Vokey has acknowledged he is
"angry" and "bitter." Publicly, Vokey describes himself as "fed up."
"I think changes to the system are well-overdue," he told NPR. "And it's a
little frustrating when you see problems are highlighted time and time and
again."
Turning Points
So how did Vokey, who's stationed at Camp Pendleton in California, evolve
from a gung-ho warrior helping command an artillery unit in Desert Storm
to a disillusioned officer?
Vokey says he can remember the exact moments that he decided to become a
Marine, and then later, a Marine lawyer.
Just after he arrived as a freshman at Texas A&M, he met an officer in the
Corps. "He was in his Marine uniform — the green trousers, the tan shirt,
the ribbons, the rank, his hat," Vokey said. "Every time he made a
movement it was sharp, it was crisp. You knew who was in charge. And it
was him. He looked like he was one of the best. And I wanted to be one of
the best."
Years later, after he had enlisted and fought in Desert Storm, Vokey got
called to jury duty in a court-martial.
Vokey said it was a routine case against a Marine accused of writing bad
checks. On the surface, he said, it resembled any trial in the civilian
world — there was a military judge, a military prosecutor and a military
defense lawyer, which the Corps always provides to defendants for free.
But Vokey said when he and the other jurors began deliberating, he saw one
of the biggest potential problems that can prevent service members from
getting a fair trial: the senior officer on the jury tried to order
everybody else how to decide the verdict.
"We walked into the deliberation room, closed the door, sat down and he
said, 'All right, let's convict this guy. Let's get out of here'," Vokey
said. "I said, 'Whoa, sir, I think we're supposed to talk about the
evidence first.' And he said, 'Jesus Christ, you think this guy's not
guilty?'"
Battles in the Courtroom
Vokey said that's when he decided to fight his battles in the courtroom —
to make sure that commanders never manipulate the system of justice.
Commanders have the power to do just that, if they wanted: The same
commander who accuses a Marine of breaking the law might also pick the
members of the jury, which will decide if the commander is right. And that
same commander might supervise the lawyer who defends the Marine against
his accusations.
But Vokey teaches his defense lawyers that they have to fight commanders
with every legal weapon they've got, even if it makes the commanders
angry.
When he trains young Marine defense lawyers, he tells them "you have one
loyalty, and that's to the client," Vokey said.
Top commanders said they appreciate and need courageous defense lawyers
like Vokey.
"We are an American military," said Tom Hemingway, who retired earlier
this year as Brigadier General and legal advisor at the Pentagon. "We're
here to support American values, and one of the things that we have in our
disciplinary system, as a requirement, is that the trial system be fair."
Hemingway said that if troops believed that commanders manipulate the
system of justice, "it would destroy morale. You want people in an
all-volunteer force to serve willingly. If they think the system is
unfair, then they're not going to re-enlist."
Cases in Point
But Vokey says that is one reason he's feeling demoralized: he has fought
cases in the past few years where officials have tried to sway the system.
For example, after officials filed criminal charges against eight Marines
on the grounds that they were involved in massacring 24 unarmed civilians
in Haditha, Iraq, the Corps assembled one of the biggest legal teams in
recent history to prosecute the men. But Vokey says officials told him he
had to use a much smaller team to defend them. "It made me very angry,"
Vokey says. "We didn't have the people and the tools that we needed to
adequately defend these Marines. It really sends a message that the Marine
Corp's trying to railroad these guys."
The prosecution argued that the Marines went on a senseless rampage; Vokey
argued that the men fought against insurgents as they were trained to do
and when civilians tragically got caught in the way, officials decided to
turn the troops into scapegoats.
After Vokey fought fellow officers over the issue, a key general gave him
permission to organize a much bigger military defense team, which has
persuaded military investigators to drop many of the original charges.
Vokey has also watched thousands of Marines come back to Camp Pendleton
from the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some have developed post-traumatic
stress disorder or other serious mental health problems, and then taken
illegal drugs or refused to show up at the base. To punish them,
commanders have kicked them out of the service, with few or no benefits.
Vokey says he agrees that commanders must punish soldiers who break the
rules or discipline would fall apart. But he says the system is too rigid
and should blend discipline with compassion.
"What's upsetting is we've created the situation" by sending the Marines
to war, Vokey said. "They fought for their country. And if we broke them,
we should fix them."
Guantanamo Bay
The U.S. has imprisoned hundreds of "enemy combatants" at Guantanamo Bay
in a military legal system that Vokey denounces as "horrific." Vokey saw
the system first-hand when he agreed two years ago to defend a teenager
there who had been charged with murdering a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan.
Vokey said he knew the case would be difficult, but he discovered that the
legal system at Guantanamo is a "sham."
Vokey said the military staff constantly harassed him and interfered with
his defense work by making it difficult even to meet with his client or
show his client the government's evidence against him. The teenager
confessed to killing the soldier, but he told Vokey he confessed after
being shackled for hours in excruciating positions and bombarded by
screeching music and flashing lights.
FBI agents have reported seeing detainees treated in similar ways and
investigators at human rights groups have reported evidence suggesting
that detainees are routinely abused.
Vokey calls the system "disgraceful."
"Anytime you want to subvert the rule of law to the power of a government,
you've got a very bad thing brewing," Vokey told NPR. "As an officer in
the Marine Corps I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of
the United States. And now we are perpetrating something that if any other
country in the world was doing, we would likely step in and stop it."
Hemingway, who until recently was the top lawyer advising U.S. officials
on how to handle detainees at Guantanamo, dismisses those charges.
Hemingway said he has asked the staff to investigate complaints by
detainees, including Vokey's client, and "we have found absolutely nothing
to substantiate that." He added, "I know of no one in uniform who signed
up to embarrass the United States of America by running a system that
doesn't meet what we consider to be appropriate standards."
Vokey, undeterred, said the legal system at Guantanamo has left him
feeling "disgusted."
'A Chilling Message'
When asked to identify exactly which officials in the military and the
Bush administration he believes have abused the system of justice, Vokey
avoids giving an answer. When pressed, Vokey went to his bookshelf, pulled
out the Manual for Courts-Martial, and read from Article 88: "'Any
commissioned officer who uses contemptuous words against the president,
vice president, Congress'" and a list of other officials, he said, "'shall
be punished as a court martial may direct.'"
"I need to be careful," Vokey said.
Given that he speaks out like that, Vokey said he was not completely
surprised when an official at USMC headquarters called him recently to her
office in Washington and fired him as chief of defense counsels in the
western United States.
Officials at the Corps would not give NPR an interview despite repeated
requests.
But when former Marine Corps lawyers heard about Vokey's firing, they were
incensed. Siegel said Vokey's firing sent a chilling message that some
officials don't want military lawyers to defend the Constitution too
vigorously.
"I believe that Colby Vokey was pulled out of his position because he's
doing too good a job," Siegel said. "I think that the people in
Washington, D.C., don't like that."
After Siegel and other well-known lawyers wrote a blistering letter of
protest about Vokey's firing and lobbied top commanders at Marine
headquarters, officials backed down and reinstated him. But critics say
the Corps is just doing damage control because officials know that Vokey
is planning to leave on his own.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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