
Loyalty Discipline Sir!
It’s in stilled in who we are as Marines. It is also about the bond between all Marines that is formed in the common forge of selfless service and shared hardships. It’s in this forge where Marines are hardened like steel, and the undefinable spirt that forms the character of our Corps is born. It draws from shared experiences, hardships, and challenges in training and combat.
These Marines do not deserve to go to prison maybe discharged from the Marine Corps. We are slapping a very harsh sentence on these Marines, by prosecuting those who has the intestinal fortitude to volunteer and protect our country, putting their live in harms way, because they follow the rules and bonded together no doubt they committed a crime. A can we pick another kind of punishment other than a bad conduct, other than honorable or a dishonorable discharge and prison?
How about;
Non-judicial punishment (NJP) in the United States Armed Forces is a form of military justice authorized by Article 15 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Non-judicial punishment or “NJP” permits commanders to administratively discipline troops without a court-martial. Punishment can range from reprimand to reduction in rank, correctional custody, confinement on bread and water/diminished rations (aboard ships only), loss of pay, extra duty, and/or restrictions. The receipt of non-judicial punishment does not constitute a criminal conviction (it is equivalent to a civil action), but is often placed in the service record of the individual. The process for non-judicial punishment is governed by Part V of the Manual for Courts-Martial and by each service branch’s regulations.
Folks; we allow murders to walk free everyday! Let’s fight to get these Marines released!
Sergio Medina, Rodrigo Sanchez, and Leonardo Ortiz
Marine veterans sentenced for brutally beating man who had an affair with one of their wives!
Norman Early III pulled up to the Southern California house one night in September 2015 and sent a Snapchat message to the woman he went there to see, saying he was parked a short distance away.
The two, who had known each other for several years, had crossed the line between friendship and flirtation while her husband was serving overseas.
The woman responded, “Come in the door is unlocked.”
The account from court documents reads like the start of slasher movie.
Minutes after midnight on Sept. 20, 2015, early walked into the modest corner house with a white iron fence and concrete pillars.
It was her husband, however, who was using her cellphone to talk to him.
Almost simultaneously, Early later told police, a car alarm started to scream and he saw a man running toward him, according to a criminal complaint filed in the case.
He slammed the front door, locked it and turned around, and there stood three Marines.
The men, wearing Jason Voorhees-style hockey masks, started to punch, kick and push him to the ground, according to the court documents.
Early later told police that he struggled to fight but that his assailants pinned him down on his stomach and zip-tied his wrists, then continued to punch and kick him in his face and body. He said he tried to shout but they stuffed a sock into his mouth and sealed it with tape. He said they wrapped a belt around his neck so tightly he almost passed out.
Please read the rest of the story and make your own judgement. Thanks for stopping bye