AP/ June 25, 2012, 7:23 PM

Widening sex scandal rocks Texas Air Force base

(AP) SAN ANTONIO - From a chapel pulpit on Lackland Air Force Base, where every American airman reports for basic training, Col. Glenn Palmer delivered his first order to nearly 600 recruits seated in the pews: If you're sexually harassed or assaulted, tell someone.

"My job is to give you a safe, effective training environment," Palmer said firmly.

What the colonel did not mention directly in his recent address was a widening sex scandal that has rocked the base, one of the nation's busiest military training centers. Allegations that male instructors had sex with, and in one case raped, female trainees have led to criminal charges against four men. Charges against others are possible.

The most serious accusations surround an Air Force staff sergeant scheduled to face a court-martial in July on charges that include rape and multiple counts of aggravated sexual assault. The other three defendants were charged with lesser crimes ranging from sexual misconduct to adultery. All of the defendants were assigned to turn raw recruits into airmen in eight weeks of basic training.

A two-star general is now investigating alongside a separate criminal probe, which military prosecutors say could sweep up more airmen. Advocates for female service members and members of Congress have started taking notice.

"It's a pretty big scandal the Air Force is having to deal with at this point," said Greg Jacob, a former Marine infantry officer and policy director of the Service Women's Action Network. "It's pretty substantial in its scope."

Yet there are signs the Air Force still doesn't have a handle on the full depth of the problem. Staff Sgt. Peter Vega-Maldonado pleaded guilty earlier this month to having sex with a female trainee and struck a plea deal for 90 days' confinement. Then he acknowledged being involved with a total of 10 trainees — a number previously unknown to investigators.

On Friday, after months of embarrassing disclosures, the head of the Air Force's training command ordered Maj. Gen. Margaret H. Woodward to lead an independent investigation. That same day, the Air Force gave reporters rare access to Lackland's instructional headquarters in an effort to show there was nothing to hide.

The headquarters facility is where Lackland trains the people who train recruits. Inside one small classroom, three women and two men were lectured on the importance of having a moral compass while watching a slide presentation titled "Integrity First."

Lackland has about 475 instructors for the nearly 36,000 airmen who will graduate this year. That's about 85 percent of what Lackland would consider a full roster of instructors, a demanding job that requires airmen to work longer hours than most for four years, at the expense of family and personal time. The Air Force recently launched a smartphone app to help recruit instructors. Topping a page of frequently asked questions is whether the divorce rate for instructors really is higher. (The Air Force says no.)

Palmer said that a slight shortage in instructors has not lowered the standards for applicants. In response to the allegations, he said instructor training is being revamped and that he was accountable for problems within the training wing.

Leaders of the instructor program, however, said the responsibility falls on the accused.

"A person sitting in that seat, they're going to do what they're going to do when no one is watching," said Master Sgt. Greg Pendleton, who oversees the training. "That's across the board. That's just them. When we're outside this door or outside these walls, there are individuals that have their own personal values."

So widespread is the fallout that Lackland halted operations for an entire day in March to survey about 5,900 trainees about whether they had seen or been a victim of sexual misconduct.

It was a highly unusual move for a vast 15-square-mile base that runs with relentless efficiency. A new class of airmen graduates every Friday for 50 of the 52 weeks in the year. At first, Palmer, commander of the 737th training wing, said he wasn't sure that halting training was even possible.

Airman Andrea Madison, a new graduate who was in basic training at the height of the investigation at Lackland, said she never felt uncomfortable with her instructors.

"They want to make sure no foul play is happening, no one is taking advantage of us," said Madison, of Columbus, Ohio.

Last week, one commander of a Lackland training squadron caught up in the sex scandal was dismissed after the Air Force lost confidence in his leadership. Col. Polly Kenny, 2nd Air Force Staff, said the dismissal was not directly related to the sexual misconduct investigation.

Nearly three dozen instructors at Lackland have also been removed in the past year, but the Air Force will not say how many lost their jobs as a result of the investigation that began last fall, only that the majority of dismissals were unrelated.

The first sexual misconduct allegations at Lackland surfaced a year ago against Staff Sgt. Luis Walker, who is charged with 28 counts.

Walker, the only instructor who has been accused of sexually assaulting another airman, faces life in prison if convicted. His civilian attorney, Joseph Esparza, has declined to speak with reporters and did not return multiple calls for comment.

Sexual assault victims are reassigned and can apply for a "humanitarian discharge" from the military, but Lackland civilian spokeswoman Collen McGhee said she did not know whether those affected by this case had done so.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
37 Comments Add a Comment
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Renee_C_V says:
I feel so strongly about this, let me add one more thing. Whether or not you're a male or female and know about someone being raped in the military and stay silent about it, you're breaking the law of the UCMJ. If everyone reports these horrible incidents, the military HAS to change policies. They can't punish all of you, right now they're only punishing the few who take that leap of faith and report it.
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blueskygal says:
IT IS TIME - Women in all areas of the work force regardless of whether it is military, education, medical, or a corporate environment need to all start reporting sexual misconduct and RAPE. This is 2012. Women have a voice and they must use it now. You must stand up for yourself and women must stand together against being mistreated and used. Do not allow yourselves to be intimidated, step forward and step up. Be strong, courageous, wise, and relentless. There is power in numbers. If HE has don't it to you HE has don't it to others. Use the social media, find each other and move forward in an effort to stop violence against women across the country.
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Renee_C_V says:
You are soooo wrong, it has everything to do with it. I think maybe you have the "big head". I'm surprised you can fit it through the door. Stop thinking with your little head. And to all of the females in the military that get raped, start reporting it, let the pieces fall where they may. If you all start reporting it the military has no choice but to change it's policy on this and stop sweeping it under the rug. I took a leap of faith and reported my superior, was punished for it but I do get compensated for it every month for the rest of my life. Not that money is the whole answer, but it helps. Good luck.
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WilliamKus says:
Surprise, an organization that rapes and kills other people rapes its own people.

You have two choices as a woman in the military, be a *****, or get raped. Either way you're just a human toilet.
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smittyc says:
Going on everywhere in the military.
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Valhalla0907 replies:
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Going on everywhere in the workplace too!
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petesis says:
I am an Air Force Veteran... this doesn't surprise me. Some of those girls were extremely ***** (not that I had occasion to do anything). I am talking crazy *****. (we guys were extremely ***** too I suppose it would be fair to say... but...Away from home for first time...Exciting handsome authority figures... It is biology... however, it is expressly forbidden for TIs to fraternize with recruits.
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Renee_C_V replies:
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OMG! Get real, please. I was in the Army for 3 years in the early 70's and was raped twice, the second time by my superior. I pressed charges and was told if i didn't drop the charges, I would be disciplined and I was. I received an Article 15, was restriced to barracks for 30 days and my pay was docked for two months. He got a couple of weeks in the brig and some sort of letter of reprimand in his personnel file. I now receive a small compensation disability from the VA. I'm sure he "thought" I wanted him....but trust me, I didn't. He was my superior and should of known better. Give me a break, okay? When a woman says no, military or civilian, it means NO!!!!
petesis replies:
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I am not making excuses for it... but it is a fact that some of those girls were extremely promiscuous. The fact that you got raped twice is an outrage. Perhaps the promiscuity of some of the other women had something to do with that perception that all women want them. I dont know... but in any case TIs in the air force were clearly forbidden from such activities... voluntary or not. Your experience, unfortunate as it was, has nothing to do with my experience.
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gerryrigger says:
During basic training at Lackland in '86, while we were in formation, we heard a female TI yell at her platoon: "That was really sloppy. When I say parade rest I want to hear 50 vajayjays(not the word she used)suck in air!" The whole company started convulsing in stifled laughter. Even our incredulous TI couldn't hide his grin. Everybody, that is, except the female platoon, of course, who stood there red faced. Is that harrassment?
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knewsteerrrrr says:
"female airmen march during graduation"

Aren't they female airWOMEN ? seems to me with all the pc garbage these days, they'd have changed that to airwoman and airmen
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Making_Sense says:
I was in boot at Lackland in Dec 1972 when we were taken to a San Antonio Spurs game. On the way back, two DI were going at it in the back of the bus with two VERY drunk female boots. This story is nothing new.
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Thisbudz4OU replies:
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If you were in boot at Lackland, then you know that the term for instructors is TI in the Airforce, not DI.
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samXXkiley says:
coucou,
++++If you're sexually harassed or assaulted, tell someone++++.Col. Glenn Palmer said,
====================
I applaud this initiative, we have to talk about it, it is the only way
to end this shameful practices,
"au revoir"
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