From Military.com:
“Military Stolen Valor Cases on
the Rise, Investigators Say”
(Special Agent David Berry
(center) led a team of investigators that tracked down stolen artifacts from
the National Archives. Berry is pictured here with Jason Metrick, Assistant
Inspector General for Investigations (right) and Chris Naylor, Deputy Chief
Operating Officer for the National Archives and Records Administration.)
Investigators at the National
Archives have taken steps to make their research resources more available to
federal and local law enforcement to deal with what they suspect is an uptick
in "stolen valor" cases to obtain benefits or loans during the
COVID-19 pandemic. "We believe they're doing it," said Jason Metrick,
assistant Inspector General for Investigations at the National Archives.
"It's a matter of exposing or finding it." The archives have
jurisdiction over the nation's repository of military records at the National
Personnel Record Center (NPRC). "We see lots of ID theft" by
individuals seeking to claim a veteran's identity to get a credit card or a
loan, Metrick said. In an interview Monday, Metrick and Waleska McLellan,
special agent in charge at the Office of Inspector General in the National
Archives and Records Administration, said their initiative is focused on
putting out the word their resources are there to help in stolen valor cases. "We
have a responsibility to protect these records" from misuse, McLellan
said. "We want to let folks know we're here," Metrick added. Some law
enforcement agencies "may not know we exist." McLellan and Metrick
said the initiative is not intended to go after that 30-something blowhard at
the end of the bar who just has to tell anybody who will listen about how tough
he had it on Iwo Jima. "Money or some type of tangible benefit is the key
element in bringing federal charges against an individual falsely claiming
valor awards," the fact sheet states.
Congress passed a bill in 2005 to
criminalize false claims about military service and awards. But in the landmark
2012 case of U.S. v Alvarez, the Supreme Court ruled that the bill was an
unconstitutional violation of free speech rights. In essence, the court ruled
that lying in itself is not a crime. Lawmakers went back to the drawing board
and passed the Stolen Valor Act of 2013, making it a crime punishable by up to
one year in jail to make false claims about military service and awards with
the intent of seeking monetary gain, employment or other benefits available to
veterans. Metrick pointed to the recent case of Christopher Crawford, 31, who
was sentenced in May on fraud and related charges to six to 12 years in jail
for stealing at least $17,000 from American Legion Post 568 in Scranton,
Pennsylvania. Crawford allegedly used false claims to get the job as the post's
executive director and misused the post's debit cards for unauthorized
purchases, including trips to casinos. He had claimed to be an Army combat
veteran wounded in Iraq, but the charges showed that he had been discharged at
Fort Benning, Georgia, under "less than honorable conditions" for
going absent without leave during basic training. In a statement when charges
were filed in January, Lackawanna County District Attorney Mark Powell said,
"The conduct alleged in this case -- masquerading as a combat veteran in
order to infiltrate and steal funds from an American Legion post -- is
breathtakingly brazen and unprecedented in my almost 30 years of practicing
criminal law in Lackawanna County. It's an affront to every veteran." The
IG's office at NARA has put out a Facebook page with a stolen valor fact sheet
-- @NARAOIGOfficeofInvestigations -- on the office's mission to expose false
claims. NARA has also established a hotline -- 301-837-3500 -- for the public
to report suspected cases of stolen valor.
^ It is disgusting for any person
who never served in the US Military to claim they did. Thanks to the US Supreme
Court and their “great” logic it is not a crime (just another case the Supreme
Court has gotten wrong over the years.) I’m glad lawmakers didn’t just abide by
the Supreme Court’s wrong ruling and made a loop-hole law that does make it a
crime. I am also glad to know that there are investigators actively working to
see if people did serve in the US Military and if they went through the events,
battles, etc. they claim. ^
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