Air Force General Accused of Sexual Assault Could Be First High-Ranking Air Force Officer Ever Court-Martialed

Recommended Videos

Cicada 5

Elite Member
Apr 16, 2015
3,136
1,706
118
Country
Nigeria
The Air Force has charged a two-star general with sexual assault, which opens up the possibility of the first court-martial for a general officer in the Air Force in the military branch’s entire 73 years of existence. The general in question, Air Force Maj. Gen. William Cooley, was charged with one count of sexual assault for an August 2018 incident where he allegedly made unwanted sexual advances towards a civilian woman.


On January 27, Cooley will face an Article 32 preliminary hearing, which is a process similar to a civilian grand jury, where a senior military judge will review the charge against him and could decide to send the case to a court-martial. Cooley is denying the sexual assault accusation, with his attorney claiming that the Air Force lacks the evidence to support their allegations.

Don Christensen, the leader of Protect Our Defenders, an advocacy group for victims of sexual assault in the military, says that the court-martial would set a new precedent.

“If Maj. Gen. Cooley actually is tried by a court-martial, it will mark the first time in the Air Force’s 73-year history that it has prosecuted a general officer,” Christensen said. “For far too long, the Air Force has operated a two-tier justice system in which senior officers are held to a lower standard than the men and women they lead. Hopefully, this is a sign that the Air Force is finally recognizing the corrosive effect on good order and discipline when general officers are allowed to evade accountability for their criminal acts.”
 

Revnak

We must imagine Sisyphus horny
Legacy
May 25, 2020
2,944
3,099
118
Country
USA
Of all the things to finally lead to an Air Force commander getting court martialed I’m surprised it’s a normal human crime and not an attempt to bring about Armageddon
 

TheMysteriousGX

Elite Member
Legacy
Sep 16, 2014
8,580
7,215
118
Country
United States
See, I would've thought that the time they loaded a live nuclear missile onto a plane, forgot about it, and flew a live nuclear missile across the country to park it on a random runway with no security would've caused a high level court martial.

I gotta stop having faith in systems
 

Trunkage

Nascent Orca
Legacy
Jun 21, 2012
9,370
3,163
118
Brisbane
Gender
Cyborg
Of all the things to finally lead to an Air Force commander getting court martialed I’m surprised it’s a normal human crime and not an attempt to bring about Armageddon
Shooting and bombing people is all cool
 

Trunkage

Nascent Orca
Legacy
Jun 21, 2012
9,370
3,163
118
Brisbane
Gender
Cyborg
See, I would've thought that the time they loaded a live nuclear missile onto a plane, forgot about it, and flew a live nuclear missile across the country to park it on a random runway with no security would've caused a high level court martial.

I gotta stop having faith in systems
That seems like a thing you can blame on grunts so you dont get in trouble
 

Gergar12

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 24, 2020
4,385
931
118
Country
United States
A more common issue than you may think in the military.
 

Gordon_4

The Big Engine
Legacy
Apr 3, 2020
6,787
6,045
118
Australia
There was a Canadian Forces officer, rank of colonel, who was charged and convicted of murder (and a laundry list of other offences, including sexual ones) and man, when the Canadian military discharged this guy they did not fuck about. His uniforms were burned, medals destroyed, scroll of commission shredded. Hell, they even scrapped and destroyed his military issued staff car.

The charges here - unless I missed a whole lot of shit - aren't as severe but I'm wondering if US Airforce will do anything similar if he's dishonourably discharged and imprisoned.
 

Cicada 5

Elite Member
Apr 16, 2015
3,136
1,706
118
Country
Nigeria
There was a Canadian Forces officer, rank of colonel, who was charged and convicted of murder (and a laundry list of other offences, including sexual ones) and man, when the Canadian military discharged this guy they did not fuck about. His uniforms were burned, medals destroyed, scroll of commission shredded. Hell, they even scrapped and destroyed his military issued staff car.

The charges here - unless I missed a whole lot of shit - aren't as severe but I'm wondering if US Airforce will do anything similar if he's dishonourably discharged and imprisoned.
I didn't even know that was legal in any modern military.