Archive for the 'Truth in Recruiting' Category

Recruiter Abuses - A Collection - #4

ABC News: Army Recruiters Accused of

Misleading Students to

Get Them to Enlist

Colonel Says Incidents Are the Exception, Not the Rule

Nov. 3, 2006 — - An ABC News undercover investigation showed Army recruiters telling students that the war in Iraq was over, in an effort to get them to enlist.

ABC News and New York affiliate WABC equipped students with hidden video cameras before they visited 10 Army recruitment offices in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

“Nobody is going over to Iraq anymore?” one student asks a recruiter.

“No, we’re bringing people back,” he replies.

“We’re not at war. War ended a long time ago,” another recruiter says.

Last year, the Army suspended recruiting nationwide to retrain recruiters following hundreds of allegations of improprieties.

One Colorado student taped a recruiting session posing as a drug-addicted dropout.

“You mean I’m not going to get in trouble?” the student asked.

The recruiters told him no, and helped him cheat to sign up.

During the ABC News sessions, some recruiters told our students if they enlisted, there would be little chance they’d to go Iraq.

But Col. Robert Manning, who is in charge of U.S. Army recruiting for the entire Northeast, said that new recruits were likely to go to Iraq.

“I would not disagree with that,” Manning said. “We are a nation and Army at war still.”

Manning looked at the ABC News video of his recruiters.

“It’s hard to believe some of things they are telling prospective applicants,” Manning said. “I still believe that this is the exception more than the norm. … I’ve visited many stations myself, and I know that we have many wonderful Americans serving in uniform as recruiters.”

Yet ABC News found one recruiter who even claimed if you didn’t like the Army, you could just quit.

“It’s called a ‘Failure to Adapt’ discharge,” the recruiter said. “It’s an entry-level discharge so it won’t affect anything on your record. It’ll just be like it never happened.”

Manning, however, disagrees with the ease the recruiter describes.

“I would believe it’s not as easy as he would lead you to believe it is,” he said.

Sue Niederer, whose son, Seth, joined the Army in 2002, said she was all too familiar with recruiters’ lies.

“They need to do anything they possibly can to get recruits,” Niederer said.

Seth was sent to Iraq and was killed by a roadside bomb.

Niederer said she was not surprised by what ABC News had found. She believes it’s still a widespread problem. She said that recruiters told Seth he wouldn’t be put into combat.

“Ninety percent [are] going to be putting their lives on the line for our country,” she said. “Tell them the truth. That’s all. Just tell them the truth.”

Copyright © 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures

Recruiter Abuses - A Collection - #3

Savannah GA Morning News

Soldier, 17, says recruiter forged parental release

Sunday, September 24, 2006 at 12:30 am

A 17-year-old Fort Stewart soldier who says he was tricked into enlisting early when an Army recruiter forged his parents’ signatures on a release form is standing by his decision to serve as an infantryman.

Meanwhile, a Salt Lake City recruiter has reportedly admitted to wrongdoing in an ongoing military probe into the allegations.

Such claims of recruiter misconduct are on the rise. Reported violations by U.S. military recruiters increased by more than 50 percent last year, a rise that may be caused by growing pressure to meet wartime recruiting goals, according to a Government Accountability Office report released last month.

Pfc. Steven Price, assigned to the 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, arrived at Fort Stewart in July feeling he’d been deceived into enlisting.

“I think it’s fraud,” he told the Savannah Morning News last month after arriving on post. “My recruiter told me I could get basic over with early and spend time with my family until I turned 18.”

Price, who will turn 18 on Nov. 26, said he was in a youth detention facility on a felony gun theft charge when he was recruited in January. After agreeing to enlist, he said his recruiter produced a parental release form bearing the signatures of both his parents, who are divorced and live 90 miles away from each other.

His father, Dean Price of Tooele, Utah, said he was surprised to learn his signature was on the form.

“Neither of those signatures are ours. It’s forgery and fraud,” he said.

Price’s mother, Lisa Jensen of Brigham City, Utah, said it appears the recruiter signed her name on a Jan. 10 parental release form, obtained by the Savannah Morning News, after she declined to do so.

“I said I wasn’t ready to sign anything yet,” she said. “We were taking a chance that my boy could go to war. I told the recruiter I needed to make sure this is what we both wanted.”

Jensen said she eventually signed a release on Feb. 8, before Price entered basic training. She discovered the forgery on the earlier document when her son returned home after basic training with his enlistment papers in hand.

The U.S. Army Recruiting Battalion in Salt Lake City is conducting an internal investigation into the allegations, said spokesman Maj. George Bacon.

He said a recruiter has admitted wrongdoing, but he declined to get into specifics until the investigation is complete.

“This isn’t something we brush aside,” Bacon said. “Anytime allegations are brought, we look into it. Forging a document is one of the worst things a recruiter can do.”

S. Douglas Smith, a spokesman for U.S. Army Recruiting Command, declined to identify the recruiter involved. He said the facts in the case have been gathered, and the investigative findings will go to the recruiting brigade command charged with making decisions about prosecution.

“Further actions are pending conclusion of the investigation,” Smith said.

The recruiting battalion was also investigating why Price was enlisted from a youth detention facility, Bacon said.

To remain in the Army, Price plans to request a court expunge his felony conviction, which stems from charges his father pressed against him, Jensen said.

“I want to stay in. I want to do something with my life,” Price said Wednesday from Fort Stewart. “I was locked up for a while after I got mixed up with the wrong people, but I served my time.

“I love adventure, so I joined the infantry, and I’m doing good here.”

Typically, a felony conviction would disqualify someone from joining the military.

But the number of Army recruits who are convicted felons or have criminal records is growing, according to a February analysis of Defense Department statistics by Salon.com.

That report found that 17 percent of all recruits who entered the Army in 2005 entered with waivers, meaning the Pentagon waived something that otherwise would have disqualified them from service. The use of waivers has increased 42 percent from pre-2000 numbers.

Recruiter misconduct is also on the rise. Last month, the GAO reported that allegations of wrongdoing among military recruiters rose from 4,400 cases in 2004 to 6,600 cases in 2005. The number of substantiated cases increased from about 400 to nearly 630 in that period.

The number of cases found to be criminal violations more than doubled, from 33 to 68.

Violations grew even as the number of people joining the military declined. The number of new recruits across all military branches fell from 250,000 in 2004 to 215,000 in 2005, according to the GAO report.

“Some recruiters, reportedly, have resorted to overly aggressive tactics, which can adversely affect (the Defense Department’s) ability to recruit and erode public confidence in the recruiting process,” the report said.

Pressure to achieve monthly recruitment goals during wartime may be one reason why violations have increased, according to the GAO.

The Army announced Friday that it met its recruiting goal for 2006 one week ahead of schedule. On Friday, Army Secretary Francis Harvey enlisted the Army’s 80,000th soldier.

A package of new financial incentives, new recruiting approaches and a bigger recruiting corps apparently worked. The result was a turnaround from last year when the Army missed its target for the first time since 1999 and by the widest margin in more than two decades.

Jensen said she’s proud of her son’s decision to serve, but she has one piece of advice for parents who may opt to release their children to the military before they turn 18: “Follow them all the way through it, and ask a lot of questions.”

Price said the Army has helped him get his life on the right track. As part of the 3rd Infantry Division’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team, he is preparing for a possible combat tour in Iraq that could begin next year.

He also has advice for new recruits.

“Don’t believe everything the recruiter says,” he said. “I strongly suggest you talk to someone who is already in the Army, who is not a recruiter, and learn about the different options available.”

Despite his experience, Price said he has no hard feelings against his recruiter.

“It was deceitful, but I don’t hold grudges,” he said. “He’ll get his punishment. I was just afraid this was going to get me kicked out.”

Signatures not theirs, parents say

The signatures of 17-year-old Pfc. Steven Price’s parents were allegedly forged on an Army parental release form by a Salt Lake City recruiter Jan. 10.

Lisa Jensen and Dean Price of Utah say the signatures on the highlighted signature panels shown here are not theirs.

http://new.savannahnow.com/node/143806

An Army of one wrong recruit

Recruiter Abuses — A Collection of Reports

All the articles below are reproduced strictly for educational purposes.

An Army of one wrong recruit

Autism - The signing of a disabled Portland man despite warnings

reflects problems nationally for military enlistment

From the Portland Oregonian – Sunday, May 07, 2006

By Michelle Roberts

Jared Guinther is 18. Tall and lanky, he will graduate from Marshall High School in June. Girls think he’s cute, until they try to talk to him and he stammers or just stands there — silent.

Diagnosed with autism at age 3, Jared is polite but won’t talk to people unless they address him first. It’s hard for him to make friends. He lives in his own private world.

Jared didn’t know there was a war raging in Iraq until his parents told him last fall — shortly after a military recruiter stopped him outside a Southeast Portland strip mall and complimented him on his black Converse All Stars.

“When Jared first started talking about joining the Army, I thought, ‘Well, that isn’t going to happen,’ ” said Paul Guinther, Jared’s father. “I told my wife not to worry about it. They’re not going to take anybody in the service who’s autistic.”

But they did. Last month, Jared came home with papers showing that he not only had enlisted, but also had signed up for the Army’s most dangerous job: cavalry scout. He is scheduled to leave for basic training Aug. 16.

Officials are now investigating whether recruiters at the U.S. Army Recruiting Station in Southeast Portland improperly concealed Jared’s disability, which should have made him ineligible for service.

Jared’s story illustrates a growing national problem as the military faces increasing pressure to hit recruiting targets during an unpopular war.

Tracking by the Pentagon shows that complaints about recruiting improprieties are on pace to approach record highs set in 2003 and 2004. The active Army and the Reserve missed recruiting targets last year, and reports of recruiting abuses continue from across the country.

A family in Ohio reported that its mentally ill son was signed up, despite rules banning such enlistments and the fact that records about his illness were readily available.

In Houston, a recruiter warned a potential enlistee that if he backed out of a meeting he would be arrested.

And in Colorado, a high school student working undercover told recruiters he had dropped out and had a drug problem. The recruiter told the boy to fake a diploma and buy a product to help him beat a drug test.

Violations such as these forced the Army to halt recruiting for a day last May so recruiters could be retrained and reminded of the job’s ethical requirements.

The Portland Army Recruiting Battalion Headquarters opened its investigation into Jared’s case last week after his parents called The Oregonian and the newspaper began asking questions about his enlistment.

Maj. Curt Steinagel, commander of the Military Entrance Processing Station in Portland, said the papers filled out by Jared’s recruiters contained no indication of his disability. Steinagel acknowledged that the current climate is tough on recruiters here and elsewhere.

“I can’t speak for the Army,” he said, “but it’s no secret that recruiters stretch and bend the rules because of all the pressure they’re under. The problem exists, and we all know it exists.”

Diagnosis and struggle

Jared lives in a tiny brown house in Southeast Portland that looks as worn out as his parents do when they get home from work.

Paul Guinther, 57, labors 50 to 60 hour weeks as a painter-sandblaster at Sundial Marine Tug & Barge Works in Troutdale. His wife, Brenda, 50, has the graveyard housekeeping shift at Kaiser Permanente Sunnyside Medical Center in Clackamas.

The couple got together nearly 16 years ago when Jared was 3. Brenda, who had two young children of her own, immediately noticed that Jared was different and pushed Paul to have the boy tested.

“Jared would play with buttons for hours on end,” she said. “He’d play with one toy for days. Loud noises bothered him. He was scared to death of the toilet flushing, the lawn mower.”

Jared didn’t speak until he was almost 4 and could not tolerate the feel of grass on his feet.

Doctors diagnosed him with moderate to severe autism, a developmental disorder that strikes when children are toddlers. It causes problems with social interaction, language and intelligence. No one knows its cause or cure.

School and medical records show that Jared, whose recent verbal IQ tested very low, spent years in special education classes. It was only when he was a high school senior that Brenda pushed for Jared to take regular classes because she wanted him to get a normal rather than a modified diploma.

Jared required extensive tutoring and accommodations to pass, but in June he will graduate alongside his younger stepbrother, Matthew Thorsen.

Last fall, Jared began talking about joining the military after a recruiter stopped him on his way home from school and offered a $4,000 signing bonus, $67,000 for college and more buddies than he could count.

Matthew told his mother that military recruiting at the school and surrounding neighborhoods was so intense that one recruiter had pulled him out of football practice.

Recruiters in Portland and nationwide spend several hours a day cold-calling high school students, whose phone numbers are provided by schools under the No Child Left Behind Law. They also prospect at malls, high school cafeterias, colleges and wherever else young people gather.

Brenda phoned her two brothers, both veterans. She said they laughed and told her not to worry. The military would never take Jared.

The Guinthers, meanwhile, tried to refocus their son.

“I told him, ‘Jared, you get out of high school. I know you don’t want to be a janitor all your life. You work this job, you go to community college, you find out what you want. You can live here as long as you want,’ ” Paul said.

They thought it had worked until five weeks ago. Brenda said she called Jared on his cell phone to check what time he’d be home.

“I said ‘Jared, what are you doing?’ ‘I’m taking the test,’ he said — the entrance test. I go, ‘Wait a minute.’ I said, ‘Who’s giving you the test?’ He said, ‘Corporal.’ I said, ‘Well let me talk to him.’ ”

Brenda said she spoke to Cpl. Ronan Ansley and explained that Jared had a disability, autism, that could not be outgrown. She said Ansley told her he had been in special classes, too — for dyslexia.

“I said, ‘Wait a minute, there’s a big difference between autism and your problem,’ ” Brenda said.

Military rules prohibit enlisting anyone with a mental disorder that interferes with school or employment, unless a recruit can show he or she hasn’t required special academic or job accommodations for 12 months.

Jared has been in special education classes since preschool. Through a special program for disabled workers, he has a part-time job scrubbing toilets and dumping trash.

Jared scored 43 out of 99 on the Army’s basic entrance exam — 31 is the lowest grade the Army allows for enlistment, military officials said.

After learning that Jared had cleared this first hurdle toward enlistment, Brenda said, she called and asked for Ansley’s supervisor and got Sgt. Alejandro Velasco.

She said she begged Velasco to review Jared’s medical and school records. Brenda said Velasco declined, asserting that he didn’t need any paperwork. Under military rules, recruiters are required to gather all available information about a recruit and fill out a medical screening form.

“He was real cocky and he says, ‘Well, Jared’s an 18-year-old man. He doesn’t need his mommy to make his decisions for him.’ ”

Question of comprehension

The Guinthers are not political activists. They supported the Iraq war in the beginning but have started to question it as fighting dragged on. Brenda Guinther said that if her son Matthew had enlisted, she “wouldn’t like it, but I would learn to live with it because I know he would understand the consequences.”

But Jared doesn’t understand the dangers or the details of what he has done, the Guinthers said.

When they asked Jared how long he would be in the Army, he said he didn’t know. His enlistment papers show it’s just over four years. Jared also was disappointed to learn that he wouldn’t be paid the $4,000 signing bonus until after basic training.

During a recent family gathering, a relative asked Jared what he would do if an enemy was shooting at him. Jared ran to his video game console and killed a digital Xbox soldier and announced, “See! I can do it!”

“My concern is that if he got into a combat situation he really couldn’t take someone’s back,” said Mary Lou Perry, 51, a longtime friend of the Guinthers’. “He wouldn’t really know a dangerous thing. This job they have him doing, it’s like send him in and if he doesn’t get blown up, it’s safe for the rest of us.”

Steinagel, the processing station commander, told The Oregonian that Jared showed up after passing his written exam. None of his paperwork indicated that he was autistic, but if it had, Jared almost certainly would have been disqualified, he said.

On Tuesday, a reporter visited the U.S. Army Recruiting Station at the Eastport Plaza Shopping Center, where Velasco said he had not been told about Jared’s autism.

“Cpl. Ansley is Guinther’s recruiter,” he said. “I was unaware of any type of autism or anything like that.”

Velasco initially denied knowing Jared but later said he’d spent a lot of time mentoring him because Jared was going to become a cavalry scout. The job entails “engaging the enemy with anti-armor weapons and scout vehicles,” according to an Army recruiting Web site.

After he had spoken for a few moments, Velasco suddenly grabbed the reporter’s tape recorder and tried to tear out the tape, stopping only after the reporter threatened to call the police.

With the Guinthers’ permission, The Oregonian faxed Jared’s medical records to the U.S. Army Recruiting Battalion commander, Lt. Col. David Carlton in Portland, who on Wednesday ordered the investigation.

The Guinthers said that on Tuesday evening, Cpl. Ansley showed up at their door. They said Ansley stated that he would probably lose his job and face dishonorable discharge unless they could stop the newspaper’s story.

Ansley, reached at his recruiting office Thursday, declined to comment for this story.

S. Douglas Smith, spokesman for the U.S. Army Recruiting Command, in Fort Knox, Ky., said he could not comment on specifics of the investigation in Portland. But he defended the 8,200 recruiters working for the active Army and Army Reserve.

Last year, the Army relieved 44 recruiters from duty and admonished 369.

“Everyone in recruiting is let down when one of our recruiters fails to uphold the Army’s and Recruiting Command’s standards,” Smith said.

The Guinthers are eager to hear whether the Army will release Jared from his enlistment. Jared is disappointed he might not go because he thought the recruiters were his friends, they said. But they’re willing to accept that.

“If he went to Iraq and got hurt or killed,” Paul Guinther said, “I couldn’t live with myself knowing I didn’t try to stop it.”

Michelle Roberts: 503-294-5041; michelleroberts@news.oregonian.com

Truth in Recruiting Self-Study Course

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We have had a number of inquiries from people who want to do Truth in Recruiting, but don’t know how to get trained and get started.

There needs to be organized Truth in Recruiting training sessions; but we are not aware of any formal program for this — yet.

In the meantime, we have assembled below a provisional “self-study” course for those who want to get involved in Truth in Recruiting.

Here is the outline:

If possible find some other sympathetic folks to work with you on this; you can encourage each other, and share the workload. Then:

  1. Send for some recruiting information, for background. You can order it at Military.com (You’ll need to submit your address to get some of this information, but if recruiters call, just tell them you’re doing research and aren’t interested or are too old). Once you get into that site, you can find this page, which has lots of recruiting propaganda. Get familiar with this page and the material. Keep in mind that you can’t take all of this data at face value; but it shows what recruits will see and hear.You’ll also get some recruiting material in the mail. Look it over, and keep it in a folder for reference.
  2. Also go to this page to see and print out a copy of the army enlistment contract; you’ll need the Adobe Acrobat reader to see it. Save this form too.
  3. Once you’re familiar with the recruiting pitch (or while you’re waiting for the material to arrive), look at these Truth in Recruiting resources, also online: Quaker House Truth in Recruiting FAQs: these FAQs can be printed out for distribution. (NOTE: This FAQ shows the sections of the enlistment contract that are “time bombs” for recruits, and which recruiters generally don’t tell them about.) Truth in Recruiting resources at the website of the Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors: For more resources, visit this web page of the American Friends Service Committee.

    When you feel ready, take your materials and call a local high school (By now you’ll know that the recruiters target “non-elite” schools, in less than affluent areas) and ask about when the recruiters will be there. Then ask to be able to set up a table for your material. I suggest taking a “consumer information” slant about this, indicating that you have some information the kids might not otherwise have, rather than an overtly anti-military perspective (school administrators are generally scared of such).

    Better yet, find someone else to go with you.

    If a school administrator resists letting you in — which often happens — don’t give up. Here is one account of how some Vets for Peace dealt with such resistance in one case:
    (NOTE: this report also shows how a “consumer information” approach will be less threatening to school officials.)

    But be persistent. You have the law on your side: if the school lets recruiters in, they are obliged to let you in too. Here is a sample letter from an attorney making this clear:

    By this time, you’ll be ready, even if you still have butterflies and uncertainty. And once you get going, don’t get discouraged. The military has a much larger budget and many more recruiters (at the moment) than we do; but you (and we) have truth on our side. With determination and a positive attitude, that should be enough.