Thursday, June 06, 2019

WAR IS RAPE

REPORT: Soldiers Charged In Death Of Green Beret Planned To Record Him Being Raped To Shame Him

The Washington Post reports:
Four elite U.S. Special Operations troops charged in the death of a Green Beret soldier in Mali plotted to record him being sexually assaulted as part of a plan to embarrass him through hazing, according to one of the accused service members.
Marine Staff Sgt. Kevin Maxwell said in a written stipulation of facts submitted for the case that the plan included bursting into Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar’s bedroom in the capital city of Bamako with a sledgehammer, choking him until he fell unconscious, tying him up and recording the sexual assault on video. The service members involved had just returned from a night of drinking, he said.
The four service members charged in the case were joined in the room by a Malian security guard and a British man who had befriended the Americans, Maxwell told authorities. The security guard was to carry out the sexual assault, while the British national planned to record it on a cellphone.


Troops charged in Green Beret’s death in Mali planned to record him being sexually assaulted, Marine says

Staff Sgt. Kevin Maxwell is expected to plead guilty in the death of Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar.



Navy SEALs, Marines charged with murder of Army sergeant
Two U.S. Navy SEALs and two Marines are charged in the death of Army Staff Sergeant Logan Melgar, who was killed in Mali in 2017. 
Four elite U.S. Special Operations troops charged in the death of a Green Beret soldier in Mali plotted to record him being sexually assaulted as part of a plan to embarrass him through hazing, according to one of the accused service members.
Marine Staff Sgt. Kevin Maxwell said in a written stipulation of facts submitted for the case that the plan included bursting into Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar’s bedroom in the capital city of Bamako with a sledgehammer, choking him until he fell unconscious, tying him up and recording the sexual assault on video. The service members involved had just returned from a night of drinking, he said.
Those statements in part match the testimony of Chief Special Warfare Operator Adam C. Matthews, a former member of the Navy’s SEAL Team 6, who pleaded guilty in the case last month.
But Maxwell, a Marine Raider who was in Bamako to assist the SEALs, also told authorities about the sexual assault plan, according to the stipulation. A copy of it was obtained by The Washington Post and verified with two sources who are familiar with the investigation. They did so on the condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the matter.
The four service members charged in the case were joined in the room by a Malian security guard and a British man who had befriended the Americans, Maxwell told authorities. The security guard was to carry out the sexual assault, while the British national planned to record it on a cellphone, Maxwell wrote. Those accusations have not previously been disclosed.
Melgar, 34, was killed on June 4, 2017, in an attack that took place on his bed as Chief Special Warfare Operator Anthony DeDolph, another member of SEAL Team 6, applied a choke hold and the other service members attempted to restrict him with duct tape, prosecutors have said. The men sought to haze and assault Melgar after months of disagreements between him and DeDolph, according to military documents outlining the case and obtained by The Post.
Brian Bouffard, a civilian defense attorney for Maxwell, declined to discuss Maxwell’s stipulation of facts. But he said his client was friends with Melgar and intends to plead guilty at a court-martial Thursday at Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia to charges that include negligent homicide.
“They committed a prank on Melgar,” Bouffard said. “It was a stupid prank, and it was not the kind of prank you or I would want pulled on us. It went bad. Maxwell is eager to accept responsibility for his role in it.”
That same week, Maxwell and Melgar took a riverboat cruise with other friends, enjoying drinks together, according to investigative documents and Maxwell’s stipulation of facts.
Phillip Stackhouse, an attorney for DeDolph, said that he disagrees with the characterizations of the night from Matthews last month and Maxwell now. He declined to elaborate with one exception.
"We absolutely deny that there was any intent to sexually assault Melgar,” Stackhouse said.
Beth Baker, a Navy spokeswoman in Norfolk, declined to comment on the details in Maxwell’s stipulation of facts.
The maximum punishment for negligent homicide includes up to three years in prison, dishonorable discharge and demotion in rank to private, according to military sentencing guidelines. Maxwell also could face additional time for some of the other charges he faces.
Matthews, Maxwell, DeDolph and Marine Gunnery Sgt. Mario Madera-Rodriguez were charged with felony murder, involuntary manslaughter, conspiracy, obstruction of justice and hazing. The four men and witnesses who were with them in the hours before the attack joked about sexually assaulting Melgar, according to military documents obtained by The Post. But Maxwell’s stipulation of facts states that the defendants also intended to carry it out.
Matthews pleaded guilty May 16 to lesser charges that include conspiracy to commit assault, unlawful entry, obstruction of justice and violating a general order by committing hazing. DeDolph and Madera-Rodriguez still face court-martial.
Navy Capt. Michael J. Luken, the judge in Matthews’s case, sentenced him to one year in prison, a demotion in rank to special operator second class and a bad-conduct discharge, which will take away most of his medical benefits. Luken left open the possibility of a reduced the sentence if Matthews cooperates with authorities.
Maxwell, in his stipulation of facts, stated that DeDolph was the primary proponent of the plan. As Matthews did in court last month, Maxwell also said that before the assault, the men woke up Melgar’s team leader, Sgt. 1st Class James Morris, asked for permission to haze Melgar and received it. Morris has not been charged in the case, and could not immediately be reached to comment.
DeDolph and Madera-Rodriguez have not entered pleas.
Melgar was a member of 3rd Special Forces Group and had previously deployed to Afghanistan. In court last month, friends and family members described him as committed to the Army and deeply frustrated with the behavior of DeDolph and other SEALs in Mali.
In a victim impact statement, Melgar’s wife, Michelle, told the court last month that she did not care about the length of Matthews’s sentence as long as he was never in a position to commit a similar act again, and that no amount of time would bring her husband back. She also said she is sad that Matthews’s “reckless choices” cost him his career and her husband his life.
“You finally coming forward was the beginning of the end of this mess, and for that I am grateful,” she said. “This has been a nightmare that I would never wish on anyone. I have hurt enough for everyone, and I’m so very sorry that your family will now have to hurt in a similar way as I have. I sincerely hope you make better choices when your day of freedom comes.”

Two U.S. Navy SEALs and two Marines are charged in the death of Army Staff Sergeant Logan Melgar, who was killed in Mali in 2017. 
After a long night of drinking in Mali’s capital, two Navy SEALs and two Marine Raiders smashed their way into Army Staff Sgt. Logan J. Melgar’s room with a sledgehammer. 
Armed with duct tape, they had a goal, two of the alleged assailants recalled: teach the Green Beret soldier a lesson...

Apr 16, 2019 - Two U.S. Navy SEALs and two Marines are charged in the death of Army Staff Sergeant Logan Melgar, who was killed in Mali in 2017. (Reuters).


May 16, 2019 - Army Staff Sgt. Logan Melgar died in 2017 after being attacked by ... Two U.S. Navy SEALs and two Marines are charged in the death of ... [Sex, alcohol and violence collided in murder case ensnaring SEALs and Marines].

May 16, 2019 - Navy SEAL Chief Petty Officer Adam Matthews will spend the next year in a ... U.S.NAVY ... accusing him of abandoning two Marines in an area of Bamako with ... Army Staff SgtLogan Melgar, a Green Beret who died from ... Documents: Alcoholsex and violence collided in murder case involving SEALs ...
May 16, 2019 - The Navy SEAL said he had restrained Staff SgtLogan Melgar with duct ... Army Staff SgtLogan Melgar was strangled in Mali in 2017. ... ruled that Sergeant Melgar's death was a “homicide by asphyxiation,” ... decided to “own this event” to keep the two Marines out of trouble. .... Privacy Policy · Contact us ...

Wednesday, June 05, 2019

WHAT D-DAY DOES NOT MEAN

Doug Ford’s Push for Cheap Beer in Corner Stores Was Made Possible by D-Day, Ontario PC MPP Says


RNC Chair: D-Day Should Be For Celebrating Trump

“I just have a reminder for the media. He’s your president, too. This is our president. This is our country. We’re celebrating the anniversary, 75 years of D-Day. This is a time where we should be celebrating our President, the great achievements of America. And I don’t think the American people like this constant negativity. There are times when we should be lifting up our president, especially when he’s overseas. He’s trying so hard. He’s never been given a break. But criticism doesn’t stop him. He keeps his foot on the gas. He’s so positive.” – RNC chair Ronna McDaniel, speaking today on Fox News.






FOR MORE ON THE REAL MEANING OF D-DAY SEE
OPERATION OVERLORD

'Complacent approach doesn’t work': UCP energy war room set for Calgary

Energy Minister Sonya Savage and Alberta Premier Jason Kenney leave Government House following a meeting with Alberta senators on Thursday, May 23, 2019. DAVID BLOOM/POSTMEDIA
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Calgary will play home to the government’s planned oil industry war room, and Energy Minister Sonya Savage promises it’s going to start its work “very soon.”
Establishing a $30-million energy war room to “counter the lies” about the industry was a key plank in the UCP election platform.
Savage said Tuesday morning on her way into cabinet the group will be small, tight and compact, in keeping with her government’s “measured restraint” on spending.
“It’s got to be integrated in with the larger fight-back strategy. That includes things like the litigation fund, the public inquiry,” she said.
“We’re trying to knit all those pieces together to make sure we get it right.”
As for why it will be in Calgary, Savage said, “that’s where the industry is and that’s where the punchy communication experts are.”

Part of a larger strategy

Savage said the war room was the policy that most resonated with her constituents when she knocked on doors during the campaign.
“I think that’s because they saw an approach before that was way too complacent, and that approach had been going on for 10 years,” she said.
“We knew about the tar sands campaign starting back in 2008, and the complacent approach doesn’t work.”
Premier Jason Kenney said during the election the $30-million price tag was a fair one.
“I think it’s the best investment we could possibly make in defending an industry that is the source of about one-third of the jobs in this province, directly and indirectly,” Kenney said at the time.
Kenney’s planned oil strategy includes boycotting banks that won’t co-operate with oilsands financing, demanding the energy industry increase its own advocacy and education efforts, and establishing a $10-million litigation fund “to support pro-development First Nations in defending their right to be consulted on major energy projects.”
He also wants to strip Canadian environmental think-tank the Pembina Institute of provincial funding and launch a public inquiry into what he believes is the large-scale foreign funding of anti-oilsands campaigns.
Postmedia, the parent company of this newspaper, has hired a lobbyist to express interest in a role for its commercial content arm in the provincial energy campaign.

Elise Stolte: Edmonton Pride is still alive and disruptors deserve to be heard

Adebayo Katiiti, the founder of RaricaNow, an organization supporting LGBTQ refugee claimants. He is a transgender man originally from Uganda who sought asylum in Canada. He's seen in Edmonton, on Thursday, May 30, 2019. IAN KUCERAK / POSTMEDIA
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Basel Abou Hamrah now has a caseload of more than 100 LGBTQ refugees.
Most arrive absolutely alone, says the settlement practitioner at the Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers. Disowned by their families, they don’t seek support from their ethnocultural community either, because it’s the homophobia back home that sent them fleeing.
They end up at homeless shelters, struggle to find housing, get lost in a complex asylum process and, supporters say, sometimes fail to tell their story clearly because of that. For them, deportation can mean death.
In the past, many refugees turned to the Pride Centre, says Abou Hamrah. But their needs and experiences are very different than those of Canadian-born community members. “They don’t fit,” he said. The refugees have been in the closet all their lives; many went to prison, were beaten and saw friends killed because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
That’s important context for anyone trying to understand why the traditional Pride Festival isn’t happening this year. It would have launched next week.
As Edmonton becomes better known as an open place, welcoming to the LGBTQ community, more refugees from that community choose to locate here. But help is thin when they arrive.
Other minority groups also feel Pride’s parties, glamour and celebration aren’t matching their experience. That’s why two organizations, RaricaNow and Shades of Colour, wanted a change. They asked for funding to share their story, too, and space at the festival.
I don’t know exactly why those conversations broke down, but they did, dramatically.
In April, the Edmonton Pride Festival Society cancelled the parade and festival. No one from the society was available to comment this week.
MacEwan University’s LGBTQ2S+ community, faculty, staff and visitors paint a rainbow sidewalk as the institution unveils a series of rainbow and transgender-themed crosswalks as Pride month kicks off. IAN KUCERAK /POSTMEDIA
Adebayo Katiiti, RaricaNow founder, says they just want awareness.
In many countries, homosexuality is a crime and police are still raiding Pride events, jailing organizers. “Black transpeople are being killed. People want to celebrate Pride when all this is happening? It’s a life-and-death situation. Cops, military, they’re on the streets arresting LGBTQ people. It’s intense. You just have to stand in solidarity.”
It seems like one step forward, two steps back for LGBTQ rights internationally. On the same day last week, the first same-sex couples were able to marry in Taiwan and Kenya’s high court voted to keep criminal laws against homosexuality.
Katiiti fled Uganda after getting picked up by police at a Pride event. In custody, he was stripped, photographed naked, beaten and tortured. His picture ran on national news and his family disowned him.
But he was scheduled to leave for Canada within two days to attend the International Gay and Lesbian Aquatics Championships. When he got out on bail, he hid at a safe house, then claimed asylum in Edmonton after the competition.
In a recent documentary about local LGBTQ refugees, another transgender man says he fled because his brother planned to gang rape him to prove he was a woman. A transgender woman says her father took her to a witch doctor to be cut and burned in an effort to “cure” her. Her boyfriend was beaten to death by a mob.
Another woman was tortured by police with electric shock at the request of her father until she promised police she would not be gay.
The documentary, A Long Road to Peace, is being screened Monday evening at Metro Cinema to kick off Pride month.
In the case of the transgender woman taken to a witch doctor, her refugee claim and appeal were recently denied. Katiiti and Abou Hamrah say the translator at the hearing was homophobic and didn’t share what the woman said accurately.
She’s gone into hiding, worried she’ll be killed if deported.
“Those are the most heart-breaking situations,” says Heather Razaghi, a member of St. Paul’s United Church who helped Katiiti settle and file his claim as part of the social justice committee. “(Others) haven’t been able to make those claims fairly and equally. If people knew those details, they wouldn’t be so quick to judge.”
Randy Boissonneault, MP and special advisor on LGBTQ2 issues, says no one officially submitted a complaint about homophobic interpreters here. But in an interview, he said he’ll work with the Mennonite Centre to ensure Canada’s immigration boards have access to interpreters claimants can trust.
I know a lot of people are still upset the Pride Festival is cancelled. But Pride is still alive.
On June 8, Evolution Wonderlounge is helping host Pride on 103, an all-day street festival downtown raising money for LGBTQ support organizations. On June 28, there’s a rally commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, which kicked off the gay-rights movement in North America. That’s at the Alberta legislature, with an after party to follow. Those are just two of the largest events.
I hope Pride Festival organizers and local activists can sort this out before next year. Life is complex, full of joy and sorrow. The fact people suffer in many countries doesn’t mean we can’t celebrate progress here. But it does mean we should at least make space to listen.
Editor’s note: This article has been corrected to reflect that Taiwan legalized same sex marriage.



Elise Stolte: Mystery surrounding Edmonton's medical superlab just gets deeper




Because that’s what they’re announcing Monday.
One of these startups is creating a less intrusive urine test for colon cancer. Another is using artificial intelligence to improve prostate cancer screening, reducing the need for a biopsy. Between the five of them, the independent tech startups now have 5,000 square feet in the centre of a facility the public has been told is so crowded, it really can’t continue.
And those are not the only new colleagues the downtown lab is welcoming, said Jason Pincock, chief executive for Dynalife, a private company that holds a public contract for lab services. The Alberta Health Services (AHS) team for immunohistochemistry is moving here from the University of Alberta lab in June, putting public sector employees under a private roof.
Dynalife’s announcement Monday obviously has political undertones.
The Edmonton-based company is in a fight for its life, buoyed by the United Conservative promise to tear up the NDP’s $50-million buyout deal. It’s part of the move to scuttle Edmonton’s proposed Superlab, which had been under construction since March when newly-elected Premier Jason Kenney’s government hit pause.
As an Edmonton resident, it’s hard to know whether to cheer or grieve that decision. Edmonton needs investment in its medical labs — 76 per cent of equipment at the public AHS-run labs is past its useful life. The superlab included that equipment cost.
Because of that, pulling the plug on the superlab will not save $590 million, as Kenney boasted during the election.
But at the same time, I don’t think recent narratives about Dynalife have been accurate.
Late last month, I asked former health minister Sarah Hoffman about the situation. She again pointed to Dynalife as the “biggest pressure point,” because it works out of leased space with old equipment.
But the NDP fail to mention Dynalife is leasing space from AIMCo, the investment arm of the provincial government. What can be more secure than that? If the Dynalife contract is serving the public interest, a premier can make that lease continue.
Plus, Dynalife’s equipment is not old, especially not when compared to the government’s own equipment. That’s where the real issue lies. According to the 2017 Health Quality Council report, Dynalife was investing between 25 and 29 cents per test annually in capital upgrades since 2012/13.
For AHS, that number was never higher than 9 cents. That’s why three quarters of the public equipment is ready to age out while, at the private site, Dynalife has made itself a demonstration site for next-generation technologies.
I toured the Dynalife facility Friday morning, watched robotic arms and scanners check the chemical content of blood. I saw where one staff member handles all the diabetes tests for northern Alberta, where all provincial pap smears go for analysis. It certainly felt calm, structured and well ordered.
Pincock says they still have space to expand in the current building, a two-storey structure that fills almost a half-block between the University of Alberta’s Enterprise Square and the Don Wheaton Family YMCA. Plus, he says, they could easily find more space in nearby office towers, if equipped with proper ventilation. Most of their equipment is no larger than a deep freeze.



Dynalife Medical Labs CEO Jason Pincock poses for a photo in front of an image of red blood cells at their downtown headquarters Friday May 24, 2019. DAVID BLOOM / POSTMEDIA

I also asked AHS for a tour of its medical labs. It turned me down. For more than a week I’ve been asking Alberta Health how much of the $590 million Superlab budget was for medical equipment upgrades versus building construction. No response.
Health Minister Tyler Shandro says he’s still seeking legal opinions to determine exactly how much cancelling the construction contract for the Superlab would cost in penalties. The project is on ice now.
We’re doing “due diligence,” he says, “taking a fresh look at this, trying to get all the information.” He would not give a timeline for that review.
Going back to the 2017 Alberta Health Quality Council report, it did not specifically call for buying out Dynalife. That was an NDP decision. The quality council simply said any private contract should be undertaken in the public interest. It recommended the current contract with Dynalife (a geographic approach, clear customer service targets and rewards for innovation) should be taken as a model for any new independent oversight board. Dynalife does not get paid per test.
Andrew Neuner, chief executive of the quality council, said its research stressed the importance of consolidation so the same type of test can be done in batches, increasing efficiency and quality control.
The current approach is like a school system, he says, “where they’ve got English on one side of town and math on the other.”
It’s frustrating because there are still too many unanswered questions to know who’s right and who’s wrong. Dynalife appears to be professional and efficient, but the government data suggest the public labs have been starved for investment for years. It’s time the government stop treating this issue like a political frisbee.
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