Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Opinion: Sexual assault should never be part of a prison term

Opinion by Reggie B. Walton
CNN
Sun, September 17, 2023 


For decades, prison rape and other forms of sexual abuse were an unseemly subject of humor on television screens, in living rooms and in comedy clubs across America.

Hearings I chaired two decades ago of the National Prison Rape Elimination Commission helped show me and my colleagues on the panel the degree to which prison rape, far from being a laughing matter, is a serious and sometimes even tragic problem. People who have been the victims of sexual assault while incarcerated, however, deserve not derision, but our support.

For far too long, rape and other forms of sexual abuse were tacitly accepted consequences of incarceration. After President George W. Bush signed into law the Prison Rape Elimination Act, or PREA, in September 2003, hearings we convened marked what I believe was the beginning of a change in the way that we talk about sexual abuse in prisons, jails and juvenile and other detention facilities.

The text of the bill noted that “experts have conservatively estimated that at least 13 percent of the inmates in the United States have been sexually assaulted in prison. Many inmates have suffered repeated assaults.”

In a remarkable show of solidarity, every member of Congress — Democrat and Republican — voted for the legislation. Today, 20 years after its passage, against the backdrop of an increasingly divided Congress and society, PREA reminds us of values that can and should unite us.

Until the passage of the PREA, there were no comprehensive figures or studies on the prevalence of rape inside detention facilities. It would take years before the most meaningful data documenting the prevalence of sexual abuse in confinement facilities nationwide was available from the Bureau of Justice Statistics — research that was mandated by the legislation.

What we did have, before the passage of the measure and during the hearings that the commission held around the country after PREA’s passage, was an endless stream of personal accounts.

Men and women described in detail to me and to my fellow commission members the abuse they endured while incarcerated, sometimes over many years. Some recounted how they were disbelieved, silenced or unofficially punished for speaking out and seeking help.

The formerly incarcerated people who testified spoke of the guilt, shame and rage that consumed them after being sexually assaulted and how the abuse cast a shadow over their lives even years after they were released — trauma evident in their voices, on their faces and in the tears many shed.

During sometimes harrowing testimony, I and my fellow members of the commission learned that such trauma and its wide-ranging repercussions could be the result of just a single night in jail.

One person described the lingering effects of being gang-raped and beaten by other inmates: “I’ve been hospitalized more times than I can count and I didn’t pay for those hospitalizations, the taxpayers paid.” We also heard heartbreaking testimony from relatives of detainees who had committed suicide to escape the brutality they were experiencing.

For the especially vulnerable — including incarcerated young people; lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals; people with mental illness; and for those detained in jurisdictions where proactive measures had not been taken to address the problem — sexual assault had become, in effect, part of their punishment.

In addition to documenting the prevalence of sexual assaults in prison, the commission developed standards designed to prevent, detect and respond to sexual abuse and harassment in confinement settings nationwide. In 2012, the Department of Justice formally adopted a version of those standards that went into effect in August of the following year.

In the decade since, the DOJ has provided grants, training and technical assistance reaching hundreds of detention facilities and thousands of staff and focused on the essential elements of a sexually safe environment. These efforts have included not only identifying and protecting those most vulnerable to abuse but also creating a culture inside facilities that encourages the reporting of abuse.

This work also involved providing counseling, accompaniment through forensic examinations and investigative interviews and other support to victims. And we’ve encouraged a culture that treats incarcerated people as presumptively credible witnesses when reports of abuse are investigated.

The standards also established an external audit to ensure adherence to the many specific policies and practices that are necessary to achieve these ends. Many state and local jurisdictions have taken similar steps, but unfortunately some have failed to do so.

Still, much has improved as a result of these efforts. According to the National PREA Resource Center, the hub for training and technical assistance, attitudes among staff and incarcerated people have changed significantly.

Accepting sexual abuse as inevitable, for example, and turning a blind eye when sex assaults occur are far less common than they once were. Based on the experiences of advocates who work inside facilities, prison rape is less frequently a subject of humor inside facilities or in society at large.

And at a time when some states and other governmental entities have taken actions that disregard the unique challenges faced by members of the LGBTQ community and the scorn that many have for members of that population, corrections staff have become increasingly aware of and responsive to the particular vulnerabilities of this population.

This is because, as required by the PREA standards, people who work in the field of criminal justice are receiving training about communicating effectively with this population, screening people upon arrival for particular vulnerabilities. They’re also getting assistance in making decisions about individuals’ housing, programming and work assignments, sexual orientation, gender identity, past experiences of victimization and other experiences that can increase incarcerated people’s vulnerability.

We are awaiting updated data from prisons and jails, but surveys of youth in juvenile facilities administered just before the Covid-19 pandemic revealed some reductions in the rates of sexual abuse — particularly abuse by staff. Notwithstanding these and other signs of progress, however, there is ample evidence that sexual abuse in confinement remains a significant problem.

Last year, Congress held hearings to explore systemic abuses by staff in Federal Bureau of Prisons facilities that had passed their audits, showing compliance with the PREA standards.

The inquiry revealed significant weaknesses in the audit, including the failure of audits to identify problems of sexual abuse in facilities where the Senate uncovered substantial misconduct as well as failures by the Federal Bureau of Prisons to respond to reports of sexual abuse by staff and to conduct meaningful investigations with real consequences.

This is especially troubling since PREA has the most force in federally operated facilities. There is also evidence that many state and local facilities have not done the work to ensure their staff have the resources and support to implement the standards that the commission adopted.

The Prison Rape Elimination Act was never only about protecting people from sexual abuse in an environment where it is often impossible to protect oneself. It was also about affirming the essential dignity and fundamental human rights of incarcerated people.

The remarkably diverse coalition that pushed for the passage of PREA and those involved today in implementing the standards and advocating for change from the outside understand that PREA challenges the underlying culture of confinement and, little by little, changes it for the better. Those effects have been unacceptably slow to occur and highly uneven, evident in some facilities far more than others, but those changes are real and must continue.

Specifically, Congress must continue to fund this important work at a level that adequately supports it. DOJ must ensure that audits of the PREA standards return reliable results, which may mean rethinking the structure of the audit.

Corrections leaders also must invest in the work — not only to pass their audits successfully but also to ensure that the culture of the institutions they operate supports the practices necessary to create sexually safe environments.

Last but not least, medical and mental health professionals and rape crisis advocates must be able to provide the same services to people on the inside as provided to those who are not in detention.

Taking away someone’s liberty for the commission of crime is a necessary decision we have made as a society, but with it comes tremendous responsibility. That is a responsibility that my colleagues and I as judges encounter virtually every day. It is also the mandate I agreed to take up at the commission that I chaired 20 years ago.

I call on our leaders at every level to reaffirm their commitment to that responsibility now and in the years to come. We must redouble our efforts, if we aim to see incarcerated people return to society unbroken by the scourge of sexual assault.

CNN 


Judge Reggie B. Walton - Courtesy Judge Reggie Walton

Editor’s note: Reggie B. Walton is a senior judge on the US District Court for the District of Columbia. He was chair of the National Prison Rape Elimination Commission, tasked with identifying ways to curb the incidence of sexual assaults in prison. The commission was created by Congress as part of the 2003 Prison Rape Elimination Act. The views expressed in this commentary are his own. Read more opinion at CNN.


'YE' BAD BOSS OF THE 1%

Former Kanye West employee claims he was forced to work in dangerous conditions and sleep on the floor at rapper’s $57 million Malibu pad: ‘Are you trying to kill me?’

Orianna Rosa Royle
Mon, September 18, 2023

Rich Fury/VF20/Getty Images — Vanity Fair


Kanye West (now Ye) is being sued by a former employee who claims he was forced to work in dangerous conditions and sleep on the floor of a property the rapper was renovating.

In the latest of many lawsuits against the rapper, Tony Saxon who was working in numerous roles at Ye's house in Malibu in 2021, claims he injured his back while on the project and had to spend days at the property with no food or bedding.

Saxon is accusing West, who legally changed his name to the two-letter moniker Ye, of labor-code violations including hazardous working conditions, unlawful wage withholding, and wrongful termination.

According to the suit filed on Wednesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court and reviewed by Sky News, Ye fired Saxon after he refused to remove all of the windows and electricity from his home in order to create a “bomb shelter”.

On 22 October 2021, according to the lawsuit, Saxon complained that he was "exhausted" from the long hours and needed time to rest but was ignored by Ye. Shortly after, he claims, he badly injured his back while working but his requests for time off were again ignored.

The final blow came in November 2021, when Ye allegedly sacked him for refusing to bring large power generators into the home on safety grounds.

"I said 'Are you trying to kill me? Are you trying to kill everyone that works here?' Saxon told Sky News.

"He told me, 'If you don't listen to me then you're an enemy, you're a Clinton, you're a Kardashian and I'm not going to be your friend anymore. I'm not going to give you an opportunity anymore'."

“I was a prisoner”

Ye hired Saxon, a musician who has a background in construction consultation, in September 2021 to oversee the renovation work on his newly purchased $57 million Malibu pad, according to the lawsuit.

As part of his role, Saxon says he was expected to hire contractors, coordinate workers at the house, and provide around-the-clock security for $20,000 per week. But, according to the lawsuit, Saxon received just $20,000 in total after a month on the job along with $100,000 for construction costs—he claims he is owed $1 million.

The rapper wanted to turn his 4,000-square-foot oceanfront Tadao Ando-designed property into an “open concept but off the grid” bunker, Saxon recently revealed in an Instagram post detailing his experience.

“I was living there running my ass ragged for him working 18 hours a day running 2 crews night and day for months,” Saxon wrote while adding that he “messed” his back and neck “for life” in the process.

Saxon goes on to explain that during his time working for Ye, the disgraced artist fired all security staff at the house, leaving Saxon to carry out the role alone despite the “constant onslaught of drones” flying over the property and “paparazzi showing up at all hours of the day”.

“This became dangerous as hell,” Saxon said. “I was a prisoner of the house. I couldn’t leave it alone as I was the only one with a key authorized or I trusted to live there. I was trapped.”

“I slept on a floor and he would freak out [on] me if I wasn’t wearing black,” he continued while sharing photos of his makeshift bed surrounded by bottled water and snacks.

According to the lawsuit, Saxon spent the entirety of his employment "sleeping in makeshift conditions, finding empty spaces on the ground and using his coat as a makeshift bedding".

These conditions allegedly persisted despite "constant complaints" from Saxon about his sleeping conditions and other hazards including workers "unsafely demolishing various parts of the house with no safety equipment".

Saxon's lawyer, Ron Zambrano, told Sky News: "Ye has shown a reckless disregard toward his employees and has flouted the law in unbelievably dangerous ways throughout this entire project at the Malibu house.

"No employee should have to suffer through the sort of working conditions Mr Saxon was forced to endure yet Ye showed no concern and merely wanted the work done, despite the hazardous and unsafe, not to mention illegal, actions he was trying to force the plaintiff to undertake."

Ye and his representatives didn’t respond to Fortune’s request for comment.

A growing list of lawsuits

Wednesday’s lawsuit was filed by the same attorneys suing Ye over allegations connected to his private Christian school, Donda Academy which allege violations of labor laws and educational guidelines, retaliatory practices, unsafe conditions for students, and mismanagement.

Students weren’t allowed to sit in chairs, the Holocaust was omitted from the school’s history classes, and there was no janitorial and medical staff in sight at the Southern California-based private school, according to the lawsuit filed by two former Donda teachers.

Cecilia Hailey and Chekarey Byers, the only two Black female teachers at the academy, said they were fired after expressing concerns about conditions at the school to administrators, according to a copy of their complaint filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, reviewed by Fortune.

They’re suing Ye and three academy directors for wrongful termination, discrimination, retaliation and wages they say were withheld.

Among many other suits that have been filed against Ye, one includes a paparazzi photographer who is suing Ye for assault, battery and negligence after he was caught on camera grabbing her phone and throwing it into the street.

Ye is also being sued for $4.5 Million by his former business manager, Thomas St. John, who claims he wasn’t remunerated for all of his work, meanwhile, a production company, The Phantom Labs, is similarly taking the rapper to court for allegedly not paying them $7.1m worth of work.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Fox News Asks ‘Annoying’ Vivek Ramaswamy Why He’s Still Running

Corbin Bolies
Sun, September 17, 2023 



Vivek Ramaswamy’s star has risen since the first GOP presidential debate last month—all to land him squarely in third place in a recent Fox News poll. The puzzling candidacy prompted the network itself to question Ramaswamy’s purpose in the Republican primary, particularly when Donald Trump still holds a commanding lead.

“President Trump has widened his commanding lead, I mean, at 60 percent,” Fox News Sunday moderator Shannon Bream said. “Now, many analysts say everybody else is just sort of playing for second place. You said you would not accept the vice presidential spot, so what’s the point of your campaign now?”

Ramaswamy deflected, pointing to his desire to expand upon Trump’s “America First” agenda and achieve national unity. However, how Ramaswamy has communicated those goals has rankled some people, Bream noted.

Kristen Welker’s ‘Meet the Press’ Debut Derailed by Trump Derangement

“Your profile is growing, but as it does, our polling also shows your unfavorables are up. This is the latest polling, up 12 points since we pulled this in August,” Bream said. “One recent opinion piece puts it this way: ‘Of all the descriptors attached to Vivek Ramaswamy, the 38-year-old political tyro enjoying a bizarre surge in the Republican primary race for second place, the most common one seems to be annoying.’”

The candidate brushed it off with a laugh and an attempt to spin the comment as solely an attack on his age—with a bizarre comparison to Thomas Jefferson.

“People are annoyed by my rise and believe that a 38-year-old is too young to be U.S. president,” Ramaswamy said. “The fact of the matter is Thomas Jefferson was 33 years old when he wrote the U.S. Declaration of Independence. He also invented the swivel chair while he was out at by the way. And so I think we need to revive that spirit. And I believe Shannon, it will take someone whose best days ahead, are still yet ahead in life, to see a country whose best days are still yet ahead of itself.”

Ramaswamy earned the network’s love following Fox News’ apparent split from Ron DeSantis’ candidacy, mentioning the candidate more than 200 times in one week according to a search of media monitoring suite TVEyes by The Daily Beast’s Confider last month. It came months after Ramaswamy met with Fox Corp. kingpin Rupert Murdoch in April.

Opinion: Trump’s gaffes should raise questions about his fitness for office

Opinion by Dean Obeidallah, CNN

Mon, September 18, 2023 



A Fox News poll released last week found that 52% of Americans don’t believe that 77-year-old Donald Trump has the “mental soundness to serve” as president. That same poll showed that 61% of Americans have the same concern about President Joe Biden, who is 80. But while there is extensive media coverage about Biden’s age and gaffes, Trump, for the most part, gets a pass.

For example, at a September 8 rally in South Dakota, the 2024 GOP presidential front-runner abruptly stopped mid-speech for 40 seconds as he awkwardly looked at the audience, his eyes darting around. Some of his supporters online asserted that Trump — who had just said the United States was “the greatest nation in the history of the world” — was overcome with emotion. Have you ever seen Trump overcome with emotion? It’s hard for me to buy that explanation.

Regardless of the reason for the pause, imagine if Biden had abruptly stopped a speech midway through and began looking around the audience for more than half a minute? Much of the media — and I don’t mean just right-wing outlets — would likely ask if Biden had become confused or had fallen ill, or if the teleprompter stopped working and he wasn’t mentally able to fill the time? Such a clip of Biden would probably be played nonstop on cable news and dissected by pundits and even doctors specializing in cognitive issues.

But with Trump, there was no notice, although Frank Bruni took note of his lapses into incoherence in a New York Times column last week with the headline “Trump Is Really Old, Too.”

Then there was Trump’s gaffe-filled speech Friday at the Washington, DC, Pray Vote Stand Summit that some observers dubbed a “word salad.” But that framing is not close to what happened. Trump — who faces 91 felony charges in four criminal cases — confusingly invoked former President Barack Obama’s name twice and apparently forgot World War II had already happened.

After calling Biden “cognitively impaired” (talk about irony!), Trump claimed the president was leading us into World War II. Of course, that global conflict ended in 1945, a year before Trump was born.

Trump then mistakenly referred to Obama in two instances. First Trump declared, “As you know, crooked Joe Biden and the radical left thugs have weaponized law enforcement to arrest their leading political opponent, and leading by a lot, including Obama — I’ll tell you what.” Obviously, Obama is not running for president in 2024.

Trump later stated, “With Obama, we won an election that everyone said couldn’t be won.” Apparently realizing his mistake, Trump then quickly said, “Hillary Clinton,” who was his opponent in 2016.

Again, if Biden had made those types of mistakes, many in the media likely would have covered them as part of the narrative that the octogenarian president lacks the mental soundness to do the job for another four years.

Besides these mistakes, there’s another issue unique to Trump, which demands more attention. It’s his assertion that he won the 2020 election. Sure, he could just be claiming he won so his base will not view him as a loser, but there is a good faith question that needs to be explored of whether such a claim is delusional.

Just last month, Trump again said he won Georgia in 2020 despite that being patently false. Trump continues to make the same claim for the overall 2020 results despite his own officials after the election — including then-Attorney General William Barr — informing him there was no evidence to support his bogus assertions. And the former president must know his 60-plus election challenges in court all failed, including in cases before Trump-appointed judges.

Further undermining Trump’s claims he won in 2020 is something he mentioned in his speech Friday in Washington, and that is polling. Trump is now touting polls that he’s leading Biden. (In reality, the two are locked in a tight race within the margin of error in a hypothetical matchup.) Well, the polls in the weeks before the 2020 election showed Biden winning by an average of 10 points. A Fox News poll released just days before the 2020 election had Biden up by 8 percentage points. If Trump had been up by that margin and then lost in 2020, perhaps it would have bolstered his claims of election wrongdoing. Instead, the polls predicted Biden would win — and he did.

Trump’s gaffes may simply be mistakes. But his continued false claims that he won the 2020 election warn us that he is either one of the most committed liars we’ve ever seen or his views are delusional. In either case, for the sake of our nation, Trump can never again be trusted to be the commander in chief.


Dean Obeidallah - CNN

Editor’s note: Dean Obeidallah, a former attorney, is the host of SiriusXM radio’s daily program “The Dean Obeidallah Show.” Follow him on Threads at www.threads.net/@deanobeidallah. The opinions expressed in this commentary are his own.

ECOCIDE
Emblematic Khartoum skyscraper goes up in flames as Sudan conflict rages on

Our Foreign Staff
Sun, September 17, 2023 

The Greater Nile Petroleum Oil Company Tower in Khartoum is just one of several buildings on fire in the Sudanese capital - AFP


Flames gripped the Sudanese capital on Sunday and paramilitary forces attacked the army headquarters for the second day in a row, witnesses reported, as fighting raged into its sixth month.

“Clashes are now happening around the army headquarters with various types of weapons,” witnesses in the capital said, while others reported fighting in the city of El-Obeid, 350 kilometres (about 220 miles) south.

Battles between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) intensified Saturday, resulting in several key buildings in central Khartoum being set alight.

Footage was shared widely online of flames devouring landmarks of the Khartoum skyline, including the Greater Nile Petroleum Oil Company Tower, a conical building with glass facades that had become an emblem of the city.

Social media users mourned Khartoum, a shell of its former self, in posts that showed buildings – their windows blown out and their walls charred or pockmarked with bullets – continuing to smoulder.


Many buildings in Khartoum are been set ablaze with residents mourning that had become of the capital - AFP

Since war erupted on April 15 between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, nearly 7,500 people have been killed, according to a conservative estimate from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.

It has displaced more than five million people, including 2.8 million who have fled the relentless air strikes, artillery fire and street battles in Khartoum’s densely-populated neighbourhoods.

The millions that remain in the city woke up on Sunday to find clouds of smoke obscuring the skyline, as the sound of bombs and gunfire burst through the capital.

“We can hear huge bangs,” witnesses told AFP from the Mayo district of southern Khartoum, where the army targeted RSF bases with artillery fire.

At least 51 people were killed last week in air strikes on a market in Mayo, according to the United Nations, in one of the deadliest single attacks of the war.

The worst of the violence has been concentrated in Khartoum and the western region of Darfur, where ethnically motivated attacks by the RSF and allied militias have triggered renewed investigations by the International Criminal Court into possible war crimes.

There has also been fighting in the southern Kordofan region, where witnesses again reported artillery fire exchanged between the army and the RSF in the city of El-Obeid on Sunday.
Thailand hunts for missing ancient site treasures

Montira RUNGJIRAJITTRANON, Alexis HONTANG
Mon, September 18, 2023 

Thailand has a rich collection of historical sites, but, like in other countries in the region, foreign looting has decimated many of them 
(MANAN VATSYAYANA)

Under the scorching sun, Thai archaeologist Tanachaya Tiandee clambers through ruined pagodas in the ancient town of Si Thep, trying to unlock their mysteries -- a task made harder because many of the clues are missing.

Looters stripped Thailand's rich historical sites such as Si Thep over decades, taking many items abroad. The kingdom is now trying to repatriate those stolen cultural treasures.

"The big picture like the building was discovered, but the artefacts which tell little details are missing, making a lot of stories untold about Si Thep," Tanachaya told AFP.

"It's like a piece of puzzle was missing."

Si Thep, which archaeologists date back to between 1,500 to 1,700 years ago, may be inscribed in UNESCO's cultural world heritage list this week -- Thailand's first addition since 1992.

Over several centuries and under the influence of various cultures, it grew into a vital trading metropolis until its decline began in the late 13th century, according to the Thai government's submission to UNESCO.

As 33-year-old Tanachaya carefully excavates the ancient stone constructions, she faces a difficult task piecing together the stories of Si Thep, which lies around 200 kilometres (120 miles) north of Bangkok.

It is believed that over the years, at least 20 objects have been stolen from the site, with experts identifying 11 in museums in the United States.

The real number of looted objects is suspected to be far higher, thanks to a lack of documentation.

Now Tanachaya -- who decided when she was young that she wanted to become a Thai version of movie character Indiana Jones -- and her colleagues face their own quest.

Can they bring their culture's treasures home?

- 'Won't accelerate' -

Thailand's government, led at the time by the military, established the Committee to Monitor Thai Antiquities Abroad in 2017.

About 340 objects have been voluntarily repatriated to Thailand since then, according to the latest report by the committee.

But the process is slow, partly because government officials are wary of jeopardising diplomatic relations with important allies like the United States.

Instead, Thai authorities have pursued a "discreet" diplomatic route, explained the director-general of Thailand's Department of Fine Arts Phnombootra Chandrachoti.

"We won't accelerate anything," he told AFP.

The Norton Simon Museum, located in the US state of California, holds nine Thai artefacts, according to a recent statement from the committee -- including one item an independent expert says is from Si Thep park.

The items were among 32 scattered in museums across the United States, the committee said.

The Norton Simon is only one of a number of US institutions -- including New York's Metropolitan and San Francisco's Asian Art Museum -- that have been named in the growing scandal around art that investigators claim was illegally removed from its country of origin.

The museum told AFP it had not heard from the Thai government, but would cooperate with authorities if contacted, and defended holding the items.

The works, which it claimed were legally purchased, "have been carefully preserved and displayed" said Leslie Denk, vice-president of external affairs at the institution.

- Dilemma over tourism -

Thai historians face another dilemma: Si Thep's bid to become a UNESCO site could boost the local economy -- but it could also put the fragile ancient site under strain.

Presently, only one percent of visitors to Phetchabun -- the province that is home to Si Thep -- are foreigners, according to official 2019 data.

The Thai government hopes UNESCO designation will help boost the kingdom's tourism sector, which accounts for almost 20 percent of the country's GDP.

There are, however, concerns about conservation.

The site is already "almost reaching its fullest capacity" of around 2,000 tourists a day, said Si Thep Historical Park head Sittichai Pooddee.

"We will try to balance things. We will try to not over-promote," he said.

Missing items mean gaps in the record, which makes it harder to satisfy the curiosity of tourists visiting the site, said Thai historian Tanongsak Hanwong.

"Artefacts dignify Thailand's past civilisation, and when some of the parts are missing, we get stuck and we can't tell important pieces of the story to the world," Tanongsak said.

At Si Thep's peaceful complex, domestic visitors gaze at a carefully carved pagoda wall.

"It's the heritage that belongs to Thai people, and that we are proud of. It would be a pity not to get it back," said Chaowarat Munprom, a 66-year-old retiree.

"It once belonged here."
US military asks the public for help finding its missing F-35 fighter jet after its pilot had to eject while training over South Carolina
CAN'T FIND STEALTH PLANE BECAUSE ITS INVISIBLE TO TECH

Sophia Ankel
Mon, September 18, 2023 

An F-35 fighter jet flies over the sky during the Fleet Week in San Francisco, California, United States on October 7, 2022.
Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

  • A F-35 jet has been lost in South Carolina after a training "mishap," officials said Sunday.

  • The US military is now appealing to the public to help find the missing jet.

  • The pilot of the jet was able to parachute away safely and is in a stable condition, officials said.

The US military has asked the public to help find its missing F-35 jet after the pilot had to eject while training over South Carolina on Sunday.

In a Facebook post, Joint Base Charleston said it was "responding to a mishap involving an F-35B Lightning II jet from Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron (VMFAT) 501 with the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing."

"Emergency response teams are still trying to locate the F-35. The public is asked to cooperate with military and civilian authorities as the effort continues," it added.

The appeal, posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, encouraged anyone with information to contact its operations center.

The F-35, a fifth-generation stealth fighter, is the Pentagon's most expensive weapons system, according to the US Government Accountability Office (GAO).

Officials estimated it would cost American taxpayers about $1.7 trillion to "buy, operate, and sustain the aircraft and systems over its lifetime," the GAO reported

Details regarding what prompted the training mishap are still under investigation.

The pilot, who was not named, was able to parachute safely into North Charleston. He was taken to hospital and is in stable condition. The pilot's wingman safely landed in a separate aircraft, according to local news outlet WCBD.

At the time of writing, the search for the jet — or its remains — has focused on two lakes north of North Charleston, namely Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion, CBS News reported.

Nancy Mace, a local congresswoman tweeted on Sunday: "How in the hell do you lose an F-35? How is there not a tracking device and we're asking the public to what, find a jet and turn it in?"

Lockheed Martin's high-tech, fifth-generation multi-role stealth aircraft is designed for strike missions and has a top speed of around Mach 1.6, or about 1,228 mph, Insider previously reported.

Representatives for Joint Base Charleston did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider.

 Business Insider

The Marines Lost A $90-Million F-35B Jet. Have You Seen It?
Erin Marquis
Mon, September 18, 2023 

A US marine checks a F-35B fighter jet during a press tour of the USS Makin Island

An F-35B fighter jet is currently missing following a mishap that forced its pilot to eject near Charleston, South Carolina, on Sunday. Have you seen it? Because the U.S. Marines are having a dilly of a pickle trying to locate its $90-million fighter jet.

The pilot is safe and was treated for injuries at a local hospital a spokesperson for the Joint Base Charleston told the Wall Street Journal:

“We are currently still gathering more information and assessing the situation,” a Corps spokesperson said. “The mishap will be under investigation.”

Oof. It seems the current theory is this F-35 may have ditched into the drink, either Lake Moultrie or Lake Marion in South Carolina. In that case, it’s only a matter of time before the plane is located, as neither lake exceeds 75 feet of depth.

This isn’t exactly the first time an F-35 has dumped into water. Last year, the U.S. Navy managed to fish one out of the South China Sea at a depth of 12,000 feet. The British managed to find one of their crashed F-35s in the Mediterranean in 2021.

And of course, this multi-million dollar plan comes with locators and GPS trackers that should make finding it a breeze. Still, the Joint Base put out the call on X (formerly known as Twitter) to see if anyone had spotted the jet:

Posting on Twitter that you’re looking for something is more appropriate for say, finding the right pair of shoes for an outfit, or announcing your parakeet has gone missing. And, unfortunately, if you do find the F-35, you are unlikely to get to keep the jet, as the U.S. government rarely adheres to the Supreme Court Decision Finders v. Keepers.

The F-35 has been a controversial jet ever since Lockheed Martin started cranking these fighters out back in 2015. One of the most technologically advanced jet fighters ever build, the F-35B in particular seemed to have a problem during those super neat vertical takeoffs and landing. Three dropped out of the sky last year while attempting the maneuver. Several high profile crashes have occurred since then, but nothing out of the realm of normality, according to the U.S. Air Force.

 Jalopnik

A missing F-35 stealth fighter may have kept flying after its pilot ejected. A pilotless Soviet jet once flew 500 miles before crashing in NATO territory.


Chris Panella
Updated Mon, 18 September 2023 

An F-35B Lightning II with 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing crosses the Pacific from Yuma, Ariz. to Iwakuni, Japan, on Jan. 9, 2017.Sgt. Lillian Stephens/US Marine Corps

An F-35 stealth fighter went missing after a pilot ejected during a "mishap" on Sunday afternoon.

It's unclear if the jet was left on autopilot and continued flying or if it crashed somewhere.

If it kept flying, as reports indicate it may have, it could echo a Cold War incident involving a Soviet aircraft.


The curious case of a missing F-35 stealth fighter in South Carolina has authorities — and civilians — searching high and low, especially considering the jet may have continued flying on its own for some time even after its pilot ejected.

As surprising as a rogue jet on autopilot may be, it wouldn't be the first time a military aircraft has flown on without its pilot. Toward the end of the Cold War, for example, one Soviet pilot witnessed his jet fly off without him after he ejected from it and continue flying for over 500 miles.

On Sunday afternoon, Joint Base Charleston confirmed a "mishap involving an F-35B Lightning II jet" in which the pilot had to eject. Joint Base Charleston didn't give further details on the incident or what specifically prompted the ejection, but it did request the public's help in locating the missing jet.

"Emergency response teams are still trying to locate the F-35," the base said on Facebook, adding on X, the site formerly known as Twitter, that if anyone had "any information that may help our recovery teams locate the F-35," they should call in.

Joint Base Charleston also noted efforts to locate the jet would be focused north of the base, "around Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion," based on the jet's last known location, in coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration.

Officials haven't confirmed or denied if the jet crashed, although Joint Base Charleston spokesperson Jeremy Huggins told NBC News the jet was left in autopilot mode when the pilot ejected from the aircraft, meaning it could've remained airborne for a time, though as of midday on Monday, authorities were certain it was no longer flying.

Flight radar data showed the paths of aircraft searching for the missing F-35 in the areas where it was last tracked.

The US Marine Corps and Joint Base Charleston didn't immediately respond to Insider's request for comment on whether or not the autopilot was engaged and the possibility that the aircraft could have flown after the pilot ejected.

But if the F-35 was still flying in a so-called "zombie state" after its pilot ejected, the bizarre situation would echo a Cold War-era incident involving a pilotless Soviet MiG-23.

In July 1989, Belgium was up in arms after a Soviet MiG-23 fighter jet crashed into a man's home outside the western city of Kortrijk, killing the resident, The New York Times reported at the time. The MiG-23 pilot had apparently ejected while flying over Poland after experiencing an alleged "malfunction."

But rather than crashing, the MiG-23 continued flying for around 560 miles on autopilot, easily passing over East and West Germany and the Netherlands before it finally crashed. The Belgian Foreign Minister at the time noted that the jet had been picked up by NATO radar more than an hour before it crashed, yet there was no Soviet response, including to questions about what weaponry the jet was carrying.

Another similar incident in which a military aircraft flew on, though not nearly as far, after its pilot ejected is the 1970 "Cornfield Bomber" incident that saw a Convair F-106 Delta Dart interceptor fighter land, surprisingly in one piece, in a farm field in Montana without a pilot.

And as for the currently missing F-35, authorities are still having trouble tracking it. Huggins told The Washington Post the jet's transponder, which helps locate the aircraft, was not working "for some reason that we haven't yet determined."

The B variant of the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter is a short takeoff/vertical landing variant designed for use by the Marine Corps aboard amphibious assault ships and airfields with short runways.

The F-35 is considered to be a highly advanced fifth-generation fighter aircraft known for its high-end capabilities and stealth. Manufactured by Lockheed Martin, the fighter is expensive. A single F-35B is estimated to cost around $90 million, and the 60-year program to develop and maintain the jets expected to cost more than $1 trillion, making it the costliest weapons program in US history.