Junior ROTC student raises his hand

As a new school year approaches, a group of Senate Democrats is pressing the Defense Department to implement legally mandated reforms meant to prevent sexual assault in the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program.

While the Pentagon previously told lawmakers[1] it has an "unwavering commitment" to the safety of high school students participating in the program, the lawmakers said the department needs to show that commitment by carrying out the changes Congress required in its annual defense policy bill.

"These reforms are necessary to ensure schools protect students from sexual misconduct by JROTC instructors and do not force students into the program against their will," the senators wrote in a letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin sent Monday and obtained exclusively by Military.com. "We urge you to implement these reforms prior to the start of the 2024-2025 school year, and we request information on how you will do so."

Read Next: Troops Will Start Getting Economic Hardship Bonuses This Month, Though Only $20 on Average[2]

The letter was organized by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee's personnel subcommittee. It was co-signed by fellow Armed Services Committee members Sens. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

A Pentagon spokesperson declined to comment on the letter or the status of implementing the reforms, telling Military.com in an email that "as with all congressional correspondence, the department will respond directly to the members."

Warren previously spearheaded a bill[3] to reform the JROTC after revelations that instructors engaged in widespread sexual misconduct against high school cadets in a program meant to instill leadership skills and citizenship values in teenagers. Elements of that bill were included in the National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, that was signed into law last year.

Allegations of sexual assault in the JROTC program first came to light in a 2022 New York Times investigation[4] that found at least 33 JROTC instructors had been criminally charged with sexual crimes in the preceding five years. The Times also uncovered that some schools[5] were forcing students to participate in the program.

Spurred by the Times report, the House Oversight Committee launched its own investigation[6] that uncovered that 60 instructors had been accused of sexual misconduct in the same five-year time frame. Of those, allegations against 58 instructors were substantiated by local law enforcement or school officials.

In a letter last year sent to Warren and other senators, the Pentagon revealed that, over the previous 10 years, military officials received 114 allegations of instructors committing violence, sexual abuse, or sexual harassment against JROTC cadets.

The JROTC program is a partnership between the Defense Department, the military branches and high schools around the country, with more than 3,500 units nationally and nearly 500,000 students participating. Instructors are often retired or reserve military officers employed by the school district, but can be active-duty service members.

Unlike the college-level ROTC program, there is no requirement to serve in the military after the JROTC. But defense officials see it as a key pipeline[7] to military service at a time when the armed forces[8] are struggling to recruit young people.

Even after the JROTC issues became publicly known, reports of sexual misconduct by instructors have persisted. Earlier this year, an instructor in Florida was fired after students alleged[9] he made sexually suggestive comments, asked students out for drinks, and touched a student's shoulder and thighs.

In an effort to prevent situations like that, last year's NDAA required the Pentagon and military services to sign standardized agreements with every school with a JROTC program. The agreements must include a requirement that schools notify the department about allegations of misconduct against an instructor within 48 hours; a process for certifying instructors that includes a background check; a process for the military services to inspect schools' programs at least once every four years; and a requirement that schools provide students a way to report sexual assault and harassment and training on how to make reports.

Under the law, the Pentagon can put JROTC programs on probation for up to three years if they don't follow these agreements.

The NDAA also required the Pentagon to submit annual reports to Congress on misconduct allegations in the JROTC and any steps the department took to mitigate sexual misconduct that year.

In their letter Monday, the senators asked the Pentagon when it plans to finalize the agreements with schools; how the department will ensure schools are training students on reporting sexual misconduct; and how students and families will be able to report to the Pentagon when schools aren't following the agreements, among more than a dozen other questions. They requested the answers by Aug. 5.

"We are glad that the president's budget request included an additional $2 million to support the increased oversight reforms established in the FY 2024 NDAA," the senators wrote, referring to the fiscal 2025 budget request. "DoD must make its commitment clear by fully implementing these reforms before the 2024-2025 school year begins."

Related: Military Focusing on JROTC Programs as Chances to Paint Picture of Service to Gen Z Dwindle[10]

© Copyright 2024 Military.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Military.com, please submit your request here[11].

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People arrive before first lady Jill Biden speaks at a Pride Month celebration on the South Lawn of the White House

Andrew Espinosa was in his office in Boulder, Colorado, when the first message popped up on the Air Force veteran’s phone: Andy, is this finally the resolution you’ve been working for?

President Biden had just announced he was “righting a historic wrong” by issuing pardons[1] for gay veterans convicted of consensual sex, and Espinosa says the text messages didn’t stop for hours.

“I’ve got shivers,” Mona McGuire, an Army veteran, told The War Horse on that June 26 morning, celebrating the news from her home in suburban Milwaukee in between interviews with CNN[2] and the BBC. “I feel relief.”

More than 25 years ago, both McGuire and Espinosa were kicked out of the military for being gay. Finally, it appeared, they would get a long-overdue reprieve and apology—and possibly qualify for health care and other veterans benefits they have been denied because of their “bad paper” discharges.

Then reality struck. In the weeks since the president’s historic gesture, McGuire and Espinosa have dug into the details and learned they and thousands of other veterans are unlikely to qualify under the narrow confines of Biden’s pardons. The whipsaw of emotions has renewed the sting of exclusion that has followed them for decades after their military service was cut short.

It’s “another kick in the gut,” says Espinosa.

The two are among about 100,000[3] veterans pushed out of the military for reasons related to their sexual orientation from World War II through the repeal of the “don’t ask, don’t tell[4]” policy in 2011. Thirteen years after that repeal, Biden’s pardons invigorated advocates and LGBTQ veterans who continue to try to undo the harms inflicted on gay veterans, including, for some, imprisonment and convictions that still mar their records today.

But it turns out there is a catch: Only those convicted in a military court of nonforcible sodomy qualify for a pardon, and neither the White House nor the Defense Department could tell The War Horse exactly how many veterans that includes—or why it excludes so many others.

It doesn’t include McGuire, who became a symbol of the injustice stemming from the military’s discriminatory past after sharing her story with The War Horse[5] days before Biden’s announcement. The Milwaukee mom was never convicted in a military court because she opted to avoid court-martial by admitting to a lesbian relationship and accepting a bad discharge. The pardons will do nothing to fix her record.

What’s also worrying advocates is that the presidential election is only four months away, and a return to the White House for Donald Trump could halt the processing of pardon applications altogether, experts say.

Amid the euphoria of Biden’s announcement, the White House estimated thousands of veterans would benefit from his pardons, allowing them to upgrade their discharges and receive veterans benefits they’d been locked out of. But Michael Wishnie, a professor at Yale Law School and veteran law expert, is wary.

“There’s a real danger that no one benefits,” he says.

‘Mass’ Pardons Are Rare

By the time the text messages stopped, and Espinosa returned his focus to his real estate job, he had already concluded that the pardon didn’t apply to him.

He joined the Air Force in the late 1980s with the hopes of eventually becoming an astronaut. In 1993, the Air Force captain was court-martialed for an “indecent assault.”

The incident occurred, he said, in the blurry early morning hours after a party while he was stationed in Turkey. Espinosa was accused of touching a fellow airman’s leg and kissing him on the cheek as they watched the playoffs. Espinosa maintains his innocence and believes he was targeted because of homophobia in the military and his superior officers’ desire to get rid of him.

Espinosa, who first told his story to CBS News[6] last year, had a letter written to his mother from a military official that explains “homosexuality is a factor in this case” but that the key factor is his harassment of another airman. Espinosa says he’s largely moved on from his dismissal from the military, but the conviction prevented him from getting a job with the government as a census taker, and he tried and failed to receive a discharge upgrade in the wake of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” repeal. Until 1993, the military prohibited gay and lesbian people from serving, but under President Clinton, “don’t ask, don’t tell” allowed gay people to serve as long as their sexuality remained hidden.

After reading the fine print of the pardon, Espinosa responded to all those congratulatory text messages from childhood and military friends, thanking them for their support but telling them he would not receive any of Biden’s goodwill.

“If it helps one person, it’s good,” says Espinosa. “I wish it would’ve been explained more.”

What adds to the confusion is that rather than granting an individual pardon that names people specifically, Biden’s clemency action was bestowed upon a group of unnamed people. Such “mass” pardons are rare, but not unheard of. In 1977, for instance, President Jimmy Carter pardoned hundreds of thousands of Vietnam War draft dodgers[7].

Wishnie says advocates and veterans should be proud that their persistence likely encouraged Biden’s pardon. Still, Wishnie is “very disappointed that it is such a narrow program.”

Biden could have expanded his pardon to more veterans, he said, including those who were convicted for charges like “indecent acts” due to their sexual orientation. The pardon also could have helped veterans like McGuire.

In 1988, while stationed in West Germany, McGuire was outed, arrested, and forced to choose between a court-martial and possible prison time or a less than honorable discharge “in lieu of court-martial” if she admitted her lesbian relationship. She chose the latter.

The discharge has prevented her from accessing veterans benefits, and, though she tried to upgrade her discharge last year, the Army’s review board denied her request because as a 20-year-old under interrogation, she admitted guilt to charges of sodomy and an indecent act.

McGuire thought Biden’s pardon might render her admission obsolete, particularly since the president acknowledged the unjust criminalization of gay service members. But, she says, “I’m just kind of in the same place, in the same position I was for the last 37 years.”

President Biden salutes members of the 171st Air Refueling Wing Mission Support Group at the 171st Air Refueling Wing in April 2024. (Shawn Monk/U.S. Air National Guard)

‘These Things Aren’t Slam Dunks’

When Steve Marose learned of the president’s announcement, it sounded “glorious.” Justice, at last. He jumped into action, and the Air Force veteran, who lives in Seattle, sent in his pardon application last week.

In 1990, Marose was a second lieutenant who followed his father’s footsteps into the Air Force. He was a proud officer and says he was good at his job. But for a few months he lived with another airman, and was eventually convicted of three counts of consensual sodomy. He spent two years in federal prison at Fort Leavenworth. But Marose was also convicted of conduct unbecoming, a charge not included in the pardon.

“I’ve always tried to be optimistic,” he says. But “these things aren’t slam dunks.”

A White House spokesperson did not respond to requests from The War Horse to explain why the pardons excluded many LGBTQ veterans.

There is another route for those who don’t qualify, a Department of Defense spokesperson said. LGBTQ veterans can submit a standard Department of Justice[8] pardon application to the secretary of the military branch in which they were convicted. But a decision can take years[9].

Wishnie and other veterans advocates say the Defense Department could have spared LGBTQ veterans the confusion over how far the pardons extend.

“For years, people have been asking DOD to do the work themself, to identify veterans discharged for being gay, whether they were court-martialed or not,” Wishnie says. “And for years, DOD has absolutely resisted.”

As the pardon stands, veterans like Marose who think they are eligible must apply[10], wait for an answer—which could take months—and then go through a separate process to upgrade their less than honorable or dishonorable discharges.

“They are leaving the onus on veterans,” Wishnie says, adding that such a multistep process will likely deter many veterans who could take advantage of the pardon.

What Happens Now?

If Marose’s application is approved before November’s election, it will remain intact no matter who wins the White House. If Donald Trump prevails, however, it’s possible that the new administration could slow or stop the process of receiving a pardon certificate that would allow veterans to access benefits, Wishnie says. No one from the Trump campaign responded to questions from The War Horse about whether a Trump White House would follow through on Biden’s pledge.

Presidents often issue pardons at the end of their terms, says Graham Dodds, an expert on U.S. politics at Concordia University in Montreal. It’s unclear why Biden decided to act on this particular issue now.

It could be an act of reconciliation, Dodds says, much like Canada, in 2017, apologized for past discrimination against LGBTQ people. But politics, he says, can’t be discounted.

“While the LGBTQ community is not monolithic, it does account for some 7% of the electorate,” Dodds says. “In a close election every vote might well matter.”

Still, the military didn’t treat each gay veteran in a uniform way. Policies shifted over the years, and a commander had the power to choose among quietly dismissing an LGBTQ service member with an honorable discharge, prosecuting them, or scaring them into accepting a bad discharge to avoid a court-martial. Because of that, Dodds says, this pardon is somewhat “messy.”

In McGuire’s case, she was not convicted or imprisoned. But she said it felt like she was.

After her arrest in May 1988, she waited three months for her discharge paperwork. She was stripped of her security clearance and forced to clean the men’s latrines. Soldiers whispered about her and three other women who were being kicked out for homosexuality. They were treated, she says, “not even like second-class humans.”

McGuire didn’t walk around alone out of fear of getting beat up.

In August of 1988, she was finally handed her orders to leave. Her dream of a career in the Army crumpled, and her heart broke on the spot. “I was crying and breathing so hard I couldn’t talk,” she says. “I was devastated.”

All those years ago, as a 20-year-old soldier, McGuire said she believed that taking responsibility and walking away from the Army would pay off in the long run.

“It’s just kind of ironic that those who were actually convicted and possibly spent time in prison are the ones eligible,” she says. “But not me.”

This War Horse investigation was reported by Anne Marshall-Chalmers, edited by Mike Frankel, fact-checked by Jess Rohan, and copy-edited by Mitchell Hansen-Dewar. Abbie Bennett wrote the headlines. Coverage of veterans’ health is made possible in part by a grant from the A-Mark Foundation[11].

Editors Note: This article[12] first appeared on The War Horse,[13] an award-winning nonprofit news organization educating the public on military service. Subscribe to their newsletter[14].

© Copyright 2024 The War Horse. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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A U.S. Air Force disbursing officer shows a stack of U.S. currency

The Pentagon says that it's finally ready to pay troops the "economic hardship bonuses" that Congress authorized last year to help offset rising prices and higher costs of living across the country.

But the sums troops will get seem unlikely to make a major impact, putting renewed attention on lawmakers to do more. A senior defense official told Military.com in an interview Friday that troops in the most junior ranks -- E-1 to E-3 -- will automatically see the bonus in their paychecks starting this month and going through December but, on average, they will be getting only $20 a month.

"The monthly bonus amounts, on average, will total approximately $120 [over the six months] ... and they're based on the funding Congress has made available," explained the official, who spoke with Military.com on the condition they remain anonymous.

Read Next: 'Today We Make History': Commission Probing Afghanistan War Starts Work with Veterans Top of Mind[1]

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill, concerned that service member pay was not keeping pace with the private sector or inflation, included $43 million in the latest defense spending bill to provide the bonuses for anyone up to E-6 in rank.

Though Congress authorized the bonuses in December in the National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, it didn't provide funding for the benefit until late March, when lawmakers finally passed a bill to fund the Pentagon through the remainder of fiscal 2024, leading to the Pentagon's slow implementation[2].

The defense official explained that, broadly, the Pentagon took that appropriated $43 million and decided how many service members it could pay before the money ran out.

The result is that the bonus will go only to those up to the grade of E-3, not E-6 as allowed by law, and will benefit around 266,000 people.

"We chose the paygrades because of the amount of money that Congress appropriated and what we could pay and what would fit within that appropriation," the defense official said.

The official also noted that, even though service members receive two paychecks a month, the bonus will be paid at the end of each month.

"While it's welcome news that the department will provide some junior enlisted service members with temporary bonus pay, as authorized by [last year's] NDAA, more must be done," Justine Tripathi, a spokesperson for the House Armed Services Committee, told Military.com in an emailed statement, noting that this "is why the [upcoming] NDAA provides junior enlisted service members with a 19.5% pay raise[3]."

In June, the House moved forward with a version of the annual defense policy bill that would give a huge 15% pay raise for E-1s to E-4s on top of a 4.5% increase for all troops[4]. That proposal would mean junior enlisted troops would get a 19.5% pay raise next year.

Conversely, in June, the Senate unveiled a proposal to hike E-1 to E-3 pay by 5.5%, while service members of all ranks would get a 4.5% pay raise next year.

A bipartisan panel of lawmakers recently found after months of studying military quality-of-life issues[5] that military pay[6] has not kept pace with inflation or civilian paychecks.

The House and Senate will have to negotiate a compromise version of their respective bills before this year's NDAA can pass into law, and the prospect for the larger hike is murky.

The White House has raised strong objections[7] to any targeted boost to junior enlisted pay before an administration study on military compensation is finished, which leads to questions whether the House's plan, along with its ambitious pay raise to junior troops, can survive.

Related: 5.5% vs. 19.5% Pay Raise: Senate Diverges from House on How Much to Boost Junior Enlisted Paychecks[8]

© Copyright 2024 Military.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Military.com, please submit your request here[9].

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