• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

"Man faked way into U.S. army"

mariomike

Moderator
Staff member
Directing Staff
Subscriber
Mentor
Reaction score
1,953
Points
1,260
"FORT WORTH, Texas — A Texas man with no military experience tricked the Army into letting him enter a reserve unit as a noncommissioned officer earlier this year, a deception that placed an untrained soldier in a leadership position in a time of war, an Associated Press investigation has found.":
http://www.wane.com/dpps/military/AP-Investigation-Texas-man-faked-way-into-Army_3370311
 
Most "Walts" are essentially harmless buffoons looking to puff out their chests, albeit under false pretenses. This fellow could have been truly dangerous.


NB: Did anyone else find the article confusing? All that switching between Army and Marines? The photo has him in a Marine uniform.
 
Fakes, fraudsters are wannbees are everywhere. Pilots, doctors, police, and yes, soldiers too. We can even add wannabee terrorists to the list  ;D

OWDU
 
Let us not forget the "Great Imposter," Ferdinand Waldo Demara Jr, who posed as Surgeon Lt Joseph Cyr of the Royal Canadian Navy during the Korean War.  He got away with it until his exploits were reported in the newspaper and the real Dr Cyr (practicing in Grand Falls, NB at the time) got wind of it.  They made a movie out of it starring Tony Curtis.
 
Pusser said:
Let us not forget the "Great Imposter," Ferdinand Waldo Demara Jr, who posed as Surgeon Lt Joseph Cyr of the Royal Canadian Navy during the Korean War.  He got away with it until his exploits were reported in the newspaper and the real Dr Cyr (practicing in Grand Falls, NB at the time) got wind of it.  They made a movie out of it starring Tony Curtis.

Maybe so, but at least he went to war.  And for someone who was not a trained Dr., did some good things before it all came crashing down.
 
jollyjacktar said:
Maybe so, but at least he went to war.  And for someone who was not a trained Dr., did some good things before it all came crashing down.

The RCN did not press charges.:
http://www.navalandmilitarymuseum.org/resource_pages/chars/demara.html
I read that he gave Steve McQueen his last rites.
 
So he acted like he knew exactly what was going on even though he had no idea.

Where the heck would someone learn That?
 
He was intelligent, confident in himself and had access to medical books.  Look at the Swede who was recently discovered to not have a pilot's licence but had managed to fly heavies for a number of years.  Qualified pilots were of the opinion he was very skilled and capable and had no idea he lacked "official" accreditation.
 
The Army has now changed enlistment procedures for prior service enlistee's.

Army enlistment changed in light of faker

By Danny Robbins - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday May 28, 2010 10:02:08 EDT
 
DALLAS — The Army is instituting a new procedure for checking the backgrounds of enlistees who claim to have a military record after a report that a reservist apparently faked a background as a Marine to enter the service.

Recruiters can no longer simply accept discharge papers as proof of service, Douglas Smith, public information officer for the Army recruiting command, told The Associated Press on Thursday. They now must also seek to verify the documents through a military database, he said.

The directive follows an AP story last Friday detailing how a Texas man apparently tricked the Army into allowing him to enter a reserve unit as a noncommissioned officer earlier this year.

Records show that Jesse Bernard Johnston III, 26, was given the rank of sergeant even though he didn't have a military background other than spending six weeks in a 12-week Marine officer candidate program for college students. Because Johnston didn't complete the course, he never became a Marine.

Smith said the change in enlistment procedure, which went into effect Tuesday, means recruiters can't accept an enlistee's discharge paperwork, known in the military as a DD-214, as proof of military service without cross-checking it through the Defense Manpower Data Center.

Previously, he said, a "valid-looking" DD-214 would have been accepted without checking the database.

Smith declined to give a reason for the change or discuss the Johnston matter, which is under investigation by the Army.

Johnston joined the Army's Corps Support Airplane Company based at the Fort Worth Naval Air Station in February. Since March, he has been stationed at Fort Rucker in Alabama, the primary training base for Army aviation. He has not responded to phone and e-mail messages seeking comment.

A spokeswoman at Fort Rucker said Thursday the ongoing investigation prevents her from commenting on Johnston's status.

Rep. Mike Coffman, a former Marine who has closely followed the Johnston case, said the change in enlistment procedure confirms his fear that loopholes are allowing individuals to join the Army without being properly vetted.

"It is unconscionable that U.S. Army policy has been to simply accept, rather than verify, discharge documents provided to recruiters," Coffman, a Colorado Republican who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, wrote in an e-mail to the AP.

In a letter delivered to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on Monday, Coffman said his office had obtained a copy of a phony DD-214 portraying Johnston as a veteran of Marine service in Iraq and Afghanistan and that the document may have been used when he enlisted in the Army Reserve.

Doug Sterner, a Vietnam veteran and military awards historian, said a DD-214 — essentially a resume of military service generated for each veteran — is an easily forged document. He said he is aware of many instances in which such documents have been falsified or altered to obtain preferences in hiring as well as veterans benefits but none in which one was used for military enlistment.

"With a history of how frequently these have been forged, it's amazing that the military has not been checking them," Sterner said.

Smith said the Army has always checked enlistees' Social Security numbers against the manpower database. However, those checks seek only general information and are aimed mainly at making sure someone who professes to have no military service is telling the truth.

Citing the investigation, he declined to say whether Johnston's Social Security number was checked and what, if anything, was discovered.

Questions about Johnston came to the Army's attention when an officer became concerned over Johnston's inability to answer questions about the Marine medals and ribbons he was wearing. The officer, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation, said he later learned from the Marines that Johnston never served. He said he then contacted military legal authorities.

Johnston's ex-wife, also an Army reservist, obtained an annulment earlier this month on grounds of fraud after filing court papers that included an affidavit in which she said Johnston obtained his rank in the Army Reserve with phony documents detailing Marine service.

In her sworn statement, Melanie Rolfing, 24, said Johnston led her to believe he'd served with the Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan and earned a Bronze Star and two purple hearts. She also described how he would attend military functions wearing a Marine dress uniform. The annulment was granted after Johnston signed a document waiving his right to contest it.
 
Easy to see now why it takes several months to from application to enrolment in the CF. Its called BACKGROUND CHECKS!!!
A friend in the US told me it cold take as little as a couple of days to get into the US military.
 
"The Recruiter is a feature-length documentary that travels to the Louisiana coast to capture a phenomenon now occurring throughout the United States - the intense push to recruit new soldiers into the U.S. Army.":
http://www.hbo.com/documentaries/the-recruiter/index.html

 
Retired FDO said:
Easy to see now why it takes several months to from application to enrolment in the CF. Its called BACKGROUND CHECKS!!!
A friend in the US told me it cold take as little as a couple of days to get into the US military.

It only takes a couple of days to do a check on someone's DD-214 from St. Louis Database. In forming the Wpg chapter of Canadian Viet Nam Veterans everyone had to produce a DD214. I think it took a week or so, and that was by snail mail at that. Ironically, the person who was the nominal "Leader" was outed as a Walt.....

It took 4 hours for the Border Guards at NB-Maryland to confirm that I was not sneaking into the US with a breakdown rifle to be part of the Libyan assassination team intent on killing Regan. Part of that was confirming with St. Louis my dd214, Eighth & Eye with USMC HQ, etc.

Someone got lazy...
 
GAP said:
It only takes a couple of days to do a check on someone's DD-214 from St. Louis Database.

St. Louis lost a lot of their earlier files in the 1973 fire:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973_National_Archives_Fire#cite_note-Archives-1
http://www.archives.gov/st-louis/military-personnel/fire-1973.html


 
Texas man who used bogus Marine record to gain Army rank gets 6 months in prison
DATE: Sep 17, 02:37 PM By Danny Robbins, The Associated Press
Article Link

DALLAS – A Texas man who earlier this year tricked the Army into allowing him to join the reserves as a noncommissioned officer has been sentenced to six months in prison and a bad conduct discharge.

A spokeswoman at Fort Rucker in Alabama says Jesse Bernard Johnston III received the punishment from a military judge July 26 after pleading guilty to seven counts of wrongdoing.

The charges stemmed from a scheme in which he used falsified discharge papers to dupe the Army into thinking he was a decorated ex-Marine.

The deception allowed the 26-year-old Johnston to join a reserve unit at the Fort Worth Naval Air Station as a sergeant without going through basic training. It was uncovered while he was going through advanced aviation training at Fort Rucker.
end
 
Back
Top