More on military expansion on Pohakuloa

The full extent of military expansion at Pohakuloa is only becoming more evident.

The Army website for the Pohakuloa Training Areas Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement can be accessed here. Written comments on the proposed action and alternatives will be accepted via e-mail (ptapeis@bah.com) and U.S. mail until February 7, 2011 to:  PTA PEIS, P.O. Box 514, Honolulu, HI 96809. Materials from the scoping meetings will be made available on the “Project Documents” page.

Yesterday, I learned that people witnessed construction activity up on the slopes of Mauna Loa.  The activity was so high on the mountain that the observer thought it surely must be outside the boundary of the Pohakuloa Training Area.    Later, they saw explosions near the site from aircraft and land based artillery fire.

We have confirmed that the construction companies were building ‘targets’.  Julie Taomia, an archaeologist at Pohakuloa said that the activity is most likely related to Marine Corps projects. She said that the Pohakuloa Training Area extends pretty far up Mauna Loa, beyond the old Hilo-Kona Road.   She said that the Marines did an Environmental Assessment (EA) for this range construction work. However, since this was done as an EA, as opposed to a full Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), it slipped past the notice of most people.  Furthermore, since this is a Marine Corps project, she said that cultural monitors, which are required under the Army Stryker Brigade programmatic agreement, are not required to oversee ground disturbing activity, which is just a way for the Army to avoid responsibility for the impacts on an Army range.  This loophole must be closed.   The Marine Corps expansion contributes tot he cumulative impacts of military activity.  There should be way to conduct cultural and environmental monitoring  for all activity related to the installation regardless of which service branch is doing the project.

In addition to this current Marine Corps expansion activity, the Marines are expanding training in Pohakuloa to accommodate the new aircraft scheduled to be stationed at Mokapu (a.k.a. the Marine Corps Base Kane’ohe).  I missed the following article in the Big Island Weekly when it came out in September.

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http://www.bigislandweekly.com/articles/2010/09/01/read/news/news02.txt

The Marines are landing on the island

New squadrons may be using Pohakuloa for future training and gunnery exercises
By Alan D. Mcnarie
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 9:50 AM HST

The United States military is planning yet another expansion entailing increased use of Pohakuloa Training Area. The Marine Corps wants to move up to three additional squadrons of aircraft to the islands, including 9 UH-1Y Huey and 18 AH-1Z Cobra helicopters and 24 of its controversial MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft.

The Marines held “scoping meetings” for an Environmental Impact Statement on the proposed expansion last week in Hilo and Kona. The meetings followed an “open house” format: instead of allowing public testimony before an open mic, the meeting’s organizers set up various visual displays manned by experts to answer questions, and allowed members of the public to present written testimony or dictate their input to a court reporter. But a group of protestors led by Malu Aina’s Jim Albertini brought their own microphone system to the Hilo meeting to voice their objections to the plan, including concerns that increased use of PTA’s firing range could stir up depleted uranium dust there and that the Ospreys, which have a less-than-perfect safety record, could present dangers to servicemen and to the community.

The move would essentially allow an entire Marine Air-Ground Task Force to operate out of Kaneohe Marine Air Base. Most of the components of such a task force, including command and ground elements and CH-53D “Sea Stallion” heavy-lift helicopters, are already in place here. The proposed move would allow medium-lift and assault helicopters needed by the MAGTF to train alongside the other elements of the force.

Although the new aircraft would be based on O’ahu, their presence would be felt across the island chain. The plan calls for training, including gunnery exercises, at Pohakuloa; for refueling facilities and night exercises at Molokai Training Support Facility and Kalaupapa Airfield, respectively; for additional activities at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai, and possibly for target practice on an islet called Kau’ula Rock, near Ni’ihau.

Perhaps the plan’s most controversial element is the Osprey, a hybrid aircraft with stubby wings that end in two giant propellers that can lift the craft like a helicopter, then rotate to pull the machine forward like an airplane. The Marines want Ospreys to replace their aging C-46 “Sea Knight” medium-lift choppers, which have only about half the Ospreys’ range and speed.

“It’s much more capable (than the C-46) and it’s faster – and faster, for the Marines, is safer,” said a Marine spokesperson at the scoping meeting.

But the Osprey has a troubled history. Based on an experimental craft that gained Bell Helicopter and Boeing a joint government contract in 1983, first flown in 1989, Ospreys remained in development for the next 15 years; along the way, it compiled a long record of cost overruns, mechanical failures and crashes, killing 30 people before the first operational Marine squadron began training in 2005.

“The mishaps that we had in the 90s and in 2000 [when two Ospreys crashed, killing 23 people] were tragic,” said Jason Holder, one of the Marines’ authorities at the scoping meeting in Hilo. But he said that since those incidents, the Marines had brought in “outside experts” to fix the problems that no crashes had occurred in over 80,000 flight hours since 2002.

That statement wasn’t entirely accurate. An Osprey went down under combat conditions in Afghanistan in April of 2010. But that accident occurred during a dust storm and may have been influenced by weather, pilot error or even enemy action. Due to an electronic malfunction, another Osprey took off without a pilot and made a rather unsuccessful landing.

The Ospreys have had enough other problems that the U.S. General Accounting Office recommended last year the Secretary of Defense require a new analysis of alternatives to the aircraft, and that the Marines develop “a prioritized strategy to improve system suitability, reduce operational costs, and align future budget requests.”

“Although recently deployed in Iraq and regarded favorably, it has not performed the full range of missions anticipated, and how well it can do so is in question,” the GAO Web site (http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-692T) summarized.

At the Hilo meeting, the Sierra Club’s Cory Harden provided a long list of media references about various problems with the Ospreys, including the aircraft’s inability to glide to an unpowered landing, as helicopters can, and a downwash from its rotors that can be so powerful that during a demonstration at Staten Island, New York, it knocked down tree branches and injured 10 spectators.

In light of such problems, Harden asked that the EIS “evaluate the risks of Ospreys harming military personnel and civilians” in Hawai’i.

Another major concern voiced at the meeting was the continued presence of depleted uranium at Pohakuloa and the risk that increased use of the facility’s target range might have of stirring up radioactive dust. The military has maintained that the number of DU shells fired there, and the risk of the dust leaving the area, were both minimal, while critics claim that thousands of uranium spotter rounds may have been fired, that the dust could spread for miles, and that even a few molecules in the lungs could cause cancer. Albertini pointed out that a County Council resolution had called for a moratorium on any live fire exercises at PTA until an independent assessment and cleanup of the DU there had taken place.

The deployment of the new Marine Aircraft would almost certainly mean more use of PTA’s firing range. The Osprey’s notorious downwash could certainly stir up dust. But while it can mount an optional belly or ramp gun, it is primarily a transport, not a gun platform. A much bigger user of the firing range would likely be the Marines’ venerable Cobras, which have been blasting enemy targets with gunfire and Hellfire missiles since the Vietnam era. Jim Isaacs, another Marine expert running one of the information stations at the Hilo meeting, noted that with the Cobras, “sixty percent of events are ordnance related.” He noted, however, that the Marines’ Cobras did not fire any ordnance containing DU.

The new aircraft probably would create some jobs in the islands – especially construction jobs. Ironically, despite the choppers’ and Ospreys’ go-anywhere mission, one big ticket item involved in moving them here could be the construction of new landing pads at Schofield and elsewhere. Marine spokesperson James Sibley told the Weekly that while there were “no plans” currently for new helipads at Pohakuloa, “Right now PTA can barely support the operators of the helicopters that we have here”: that downwash could potentially lift the existing runway’s steel mesh material, causing damage.

Despite their obvious differences, the Marines joined the protestors in an opening pule, or Hawaiian prayer. A court reporter typed continuously during the protestor’s testimony, apparently taking it down.

Members of the public who missed the meetings are encouraged to visit the project’s website, http://www.mcbh.usmc.mil/22h1eis to submit online testimony, or to mail comments to Department of the Navy, Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Pacific, Attn: EV21, MV 22/H-1 EIS Manager, Makalapa Drive, Suite 100, Pearl Harbor, HI 96860-3134.

'Hey, can you move the birds?'

Marines drive amphibious assault vehicles through Nu’upia pond, a wetland and Hawaiian fishpond, to help create bird habitat?    “It’s better than a monster-truck rally.”

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Posted on: Monday, January 13, 2003

Mud-churning Marines help birds

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

KANE’OHE BAY – Back in the late 1970s, the Marines used to drive their tanklike amphibious vehicles through the Nu’upia Ponds on base to get to the ocean.

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Marines drive their amphibious-assault vehicles through Nu’upia Ponds during training. The wetlands on the Marine Corps base in Kane’ohe are home to about 50 species of birds, including the endangered Hawaiian stilt. William Cole • The Honolulu Advertiser

But that created a problem: Birds liked to nest in the organism-rich mud churned up by the vehicles’ tank treads in the salty coastal wetlands.

“They called Fish and Wildlife and said, ‘Hey, can you move the birds?’ ” recalls Diane Drigot, senior natural resources manager for Marine Corps Base Hawai’i.

But what could have become a confrontation instead turned into a solution, and one of the more unique environmental partnerships within the U.S. military.

Once a year, Marines of the amphibious-assault vehicle platoon from Combat Support Co., 3rd Marine Regiment, get to churn up the mud of the 482-acre wetlands to their hearts’ content.

The vehicles flatten invasive pickleweed that threaten to choke off the ponds, and create the same kind of mud mounds that nesting birds found to their liking in the 1970s.

Drigot said over the past 200 years, Hawai’i has lost about one-third of the wetlands that once covered 20,000 acres.

“Eighty percent of wetlands left on the island of O’ahu are on this side of the island, and most of them are right here at Nu’upia Ponds,” Drigot said.

In the past 21 years, with help from the Marine Corps, the ponds – part of a wildlife management area – have become home or a stopover spot for 50 different species of birds.

Among them is the endangered Hawaiian stilt.

In 1980 and 1981, only about 60 of the birds lived in the wetlands.

“Now, we have about 130 birds that call Nu’upia Ponds their home,” Drigot said. “Without the help of these 26-ton vehicles, they wouldn’t have any home here at all because of these weeds that have moved in.”

At a time when military training areas are increasingly coming under fire from environmentalists, the Nu’upia Ponds program has become a poster child for the type of partnership that can exist.

This year it will be featured in just that way – on a national Marine Corps conservation effort poster.

On the Marine Corps side, the AAV platoon of 16 vehicles gets training driving in the mud and in recovery operations when they get stuck.

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The vehicles used at Nu’upia Ponds help to flatten invasive pickleweed; if not for the Marine drive-throughs, “you’d have pickleweed up to your waist,” said one official. William Cole • The Honolulu Advertiser

Plus, it’s fun.

“It’s awesome. It’s better than a monster-truck rally – you can actually do it yourself,” said Sgt. Jared Genco, 22, an AAV driver. “No matter how bad of an off-road machine you might get – an SUV, whatever, it will never go through stuff like this.”

That “stuff like this” is knee-deep mud and water.

The AAVs, armed with .50-caliber machine guns and 40 mm grenade launchers and capable of carrying up to 20 combat-ready Marines, made quick work of pickleweed control last week during two days of training.

The outings are timed to precede the March and April breeding season for stilts.

“Basically, the idea is you’re going in a crisscross pattern, and just covering all the ground that you can,” said 2nd Lt. Houston Evans, 24, the AAV platoon commander.

“(The Marines) have told me in a lot of places in Hawai’i they have to do very controlled training and stick to a straight line and make sure they don’t damage anything because Marines care about the sensitive environment,” Drigot said. “But right here, we let them go full throttle and have a little more fun, because that helps the environment.”

Evans calls the mud the most challenging land environment to drive in. In the ocean, the tank treads aren’t used; water jets push the AAV along.

“Just driving along the road or swimming in the ocean – that’s a completely different environment (than the wetlands),” Evans said.

The AAVs get to drive up to 15 mph through Nu’upia Ponds. Top speed on land is about 45 mph.

These days, the Marines bypass the wetlands to reach the ocean for training.

The once-a-year opportunity in the ponds is all the Marines get.

“We’d like to do it more,” Evans said.

Of the 482 acres, about one-third is covered in pickleweed, which was brought to Hawai’i from Argentina, Drigot said.

“It’s just taken over Hawai’i’s habitat for these birds,” she said.

The stilts live on bugs, crustaceans and little fish, and use mud mounds surrounded by water moats to lay their eggs.

“If we didn’t do this operation, you’d have pickleweed up to your waist,” Drigot said.

Endangered Hawaiian ducks, black-crowned night heron and golden plover can be found at Nu’upia Ponds, which is a bird spotters’ paradise.

During training last week, Drigot spotted a rare pair of Caspian terns.

“Without the help of the (amphibious-assault vehicle) platoon here at Marine Corps Base Hawai’i, the birds would have gone away a long time ago,” Drigot said.

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com or 525-5459.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Jan/13/mn/mn02a.html

Marines: Stranded concert goers "should have planned their day" better

Posted on: Monday, August 17, 2009

Band’s fans stalled on H-3

Some never made it to Black Eyed Peas concert at Kane’ohe Marine base

By John Windrow
Advertiser Staff Writer

People who waited for hours on H-3 Freeway only to miss Saturday night’s Black Eyed Peas concert at Marine Corps Base Kane’ohe’s BayFest should have planned better, Marine officials said yesterday.

Debbie Bookatz, marketing director for Marine Corps Community Service, pointed out that Saturday’s concert area opened at 4 p.m. for the scheduled 8 p.m. concert.

“People should have planned their day,” Bookatz said.

The start of the 90-minute show actually was delayed and did not begin until around 9 p.m.

Out of the 15,000 tickets that were sold for one of the most popular hip-hop groups in the country, 90 percent were used, which means that about 1,500 people with tickets did not attend, Bookatz said.

There are no plans for refunds, Bookatz said, but her office is studying the situation.

Jacob and Cheryl Reed of Waikiki left for the concert with three other people at 7 p.m.

“When we got to the area and turned off H-3 the traffic stopped,” Cheryl said yesterday. It took us two hours to get to the gate. We didn’t get to the gate until 9:30 or 10.”

The Reeds and their friends gave up and turned around. “We were in disbelief,” Cheryl said. “We had five people in the car who spent $52 each and we never got to see the show.”

When they returned to town, Cheryl said traffic to the base was backed up for “a couple of miles.”

Donald Naquin of Kane’ohe said he and his girlfriend left about 7:30 p.m. and came to a standstill about two miles from the gate.

“Never have I encountered a traffic mess like the one we got into,” he said. “We spent two hours waiting in traffic.”

Naquin said when he reached the gate at 10:10 p.m., “The Marines told us the show was over and let people decide if they wanted to go ahead and leave.”

Naquin said he thought the difficulty was in getting people parked. “I just don’t understand what happened,” he said.

The Marines yesterday said some people simply didn’t leave home early enough. They said about 21,000 people were at the event counting the staff volunteers, and that 200 military personnel, police officers, staff and volunteers were directing traffic and providing security.

Lt. Marc Farr, a member of the base police force, said his personnel controlled events on the base, not on H-3.

“Absolutely we had ample parking and security,” he said. “We partnered with HPD and provided a safe environment all day. Once people reached the gate we had them parked in 20 minutes.”

He also said that shuttles were available to take people from the parking lot to the concert area.

Farr and Marine Maj. Alan Crouch stressed that there were no significant safety incidents or injuries reported and once people got onto the base things ran safely and smoothly.

Crouch likened the event to an air show or rock festival.

“People have to plan and leave early,” he said.

Also the traffic flowing off H-3 and onto the approach to the two-lane gate formed an unavoidable bottleneck, he said.

“It’s like emptying a 5-gallon jug going through a funnel,” he said. “The water only flows so fast.”

Officials said the base only has two gates. The front gate was used to let people onto the base and the back gate was for people who work and live on the base, they said.

Farr did say the the situation would be evaluated and officials would see if there were some way to ease the traffic problem next year.

Reach John Windrow at jwindrow@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Marines charged with rape of 12 year-old girl

http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090724_marines_charged_in_rape_of_girl_12.html?page=1&c=y

Marines charged in rape of girl, 12

By Star-Bulletin staff and the Lawton (Okla.) Constitution

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jul 24, 2009

A Kaneohe Marine and two other Marines on the mainland have been charged in Oklahoma with first-degree rape of a 12-year-old girl.

A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Pfc. Jordan P. Kinshella, 18, who was charged Tuesday for the alleged rape of the girl on April 1, according to court records.

Kinshella has been assigned to 1st Battalion, 12th Marine Regiment, at Marine Corps Base Hawaii at Kaneohe Bay since May 24. He has been a Marine since Sept. 15 and has not deployed, according to the Marine Corps.

Kaneohe Marine spokesman Maj. Alan Crouch said yesterday that the investigation is ongoing, and no further details were available.

Media inquiries in Hawaii were being forwarded to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service in Washington, D.C.

Kinshella is among several Marines accused of having sex with the sixth-grade girl as part of what investigators call a bizarre and disturbing sex scandal, according to a Lawton (Okla.) Constitution report. The Marines were attending the U.S. Marine Battery at Fort Sill, Okla., which serves as a temporary school for Marines who take classes and undergo training.

Authorities allege 33-year-old Amy Rivera had befriended the girl and taken her to parties with the Marines at a hotel, the Constitution reported. The newspaper said Rivera was charged June 29 with procuring a child for lewdness or other indecent acts. Her bail was set at $7,500.

The girl’s parents, age 39 and 36, were charged last week with enabling child neglect, a felony punishable by up to life in prison, for allowing their daughter to stay with Rivera.

Comanche County District Attorney Fred Smith told the Army Times early this month that Rivera, of Fletcher, Okla., befriended the Marines after her husband deployed to Iraq, partying with them regularly. She began bringing the girl to the parties in March, with several Marines having sex with her until recently, Smith told the Army Times.

Lance Cpl. Logan Combs, 19, was arrested and charged on July 1 with first-degree rape that allegedly occurred on March 31. He is being held at the Comanche County Detention Center in Oklahoma in lieu of $30,000 bond.

On July 14, investigators also charged 19-year-old Pfc. Curtis G. Dorton with first-degree rape, which allegedly occurred on May 8. A warrant was issued for his arrest. Dorton is stationed at Twentynine Palms, Calif.

According to court records, police sought out the Marines after the 12-year-old told investigators she had sex with them and mentioned them by name, the Constitution reported.

The newspaper added that authorities believe several more Marines sexually assaulted the girl over several months, and they are working on tracking them down since they are no longer at Fort Sill.

Lawton Constitution reporter Malinda Rust and Star-Bulletin reporter Gary T. Kubota contributed to this article.

Waikane Valley Restoration Advisory Board Meeting

Waikane Valley Restoration Advisory Board Meeting

April 15, 2009

7:00 to 9:00 pm

Wai’ahole Elementary School

Public Meeting to discuss the Marine Corps clean up of unexploded munitions in the Kamaka family land in Waikane Valley.

Background

In the 1940s, the military leased nearly 1000 acres of land in Wai’ahole and Waikane Valleys for training with an agreement to return the land in its original condition.   One of the families whose land was leased was the Kamaka family, who had 187 acres in Waikane valley.  This happened to be one of the areas where the heaviest live fire artillery training took place. After the land was returned to the family in the 1970s, Raymond Kamaka began farming the land until unexploded ordnance began to turn up.  When he asked the Marine Corps to clean up the munitions as agreed, the Marines instead moved to condemn the property.   After a long legal and political battle the land was condemned. Raymond refused to accept the court’s ruling and the “blood money” from the military.

In 2003, the Marines announced plans  to resume jungle warfare training in Waikane, geared to fighting insurgencies in the Philippines.  The community blasted the expansion of traning in Waikane and called instead for the clean up and return of the land.   The jungle warfare idea was scrapped, but the Marines refused to discuss clean up at that time.

Then quietly around 2006, the Marine Corps officially “closed” Waikane as an active range, which triggered the Department of Defense Installation Restoration Program (IRP) and the commencement of clean up procedures.   Clean up procedures under the IRP usually have a joing community-military Restoration Advisory Committee to monitor the design and execution of the clean up.

The Waikane Valley RAB began in 2007 and last met in April 2008.   It overseas only the Marine Corps clean up on the Kamaka parcel in Waikane.  There is also an Army Corps of Engineers munitions clean up underway in the remaining portions of Waikane valley under a different program, the Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS).   The Army program is several years further along than the Marine Corps clean up. It does not have a RAB.

Marines attempted to sell stolen night-vision goggles

Federal Agents Tight-Lipped About Bluff City Raid

By Michael Owens
Reporter / Bristol Herald Courier
Published: April 2, 2009

BLUFF CITY, Tenn. – The federal police raid of a house here Wednesday morning might be connected to alleged attempts by active duty Marines to sell stolen military night-vision scopes in Hawaii.

Linked to the home at 288 Jonesboro Drive is Lance Cpl. Ronald William Abram, 20, who faces federal charges of conspiring to sell eight scopes to a Hong Kong buyer for $20,000. His father, Ronnie Abram, lives at the house, according to directory listings.

So far, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has remained tight-lipped about the reasons for the search. A department spokesman, citing the search as part of an open investigation, refused to comment.

More than 20 officers from ICE, the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Navy Criminal Investigative Service, the U.S. Marshals Service, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the Tennessee Highway Patrol stormed the two-story house at 9 a.m. They arrived in cars, vans and SUVs sporting license plates from Louisiana, Illinois and Tennessee.

Also there were local firefighters, who helped officers crack open a knee-high safe with pneumatic shears, called the “Jaws of Life,” which are primarily used to pry people from wrecked cars. Pulled from inside the safe was a small, wooden box.

One federal official, spotted through the open front door, sat at the living room computer typing and reading.

NCIS spokesman Ed Buice confirmed that some evidence was seized, but declined to elaborate. No arrests were made, he added.

“Hopefully, we can talk more about it in the future,” he said.

The Bristol Herald Courier could not reach family members. Ronnie Abram’s phone has been disconnected, and calls to other family members were not returned.

Wednesday’s raid was not the first time that Ronald William Abram drew law enforcement officers to his parents’ Jonesboro Drive home. The Herald Courier earlier reported that a domestic dispute call brought officers there on April 3, 2007. At the time, Ronald William Abram was on leave from his base at Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.

Bluff City Police officers, while attempting to sort out the evening’s events, handcuffed a drunk Ronald William Abram and left him in the back of a police cruiser. He somehow dismantled a radar antenna inside the cruiser and used it to scratch the Plexiglas barrier between the front and rear seats, police said.

The Marine eventually pleaded guilty to public intoxication and was fined $50. But prosecutors dropped the charges of vandalism and underage drinking under assurance that the Marine Corp. would deal with the behavior, the Herald Courier reported.

Last July, he again landed on authorities’ radar when ICE agents uncovered a scheme to sell stolen night vision scopes on the Internet auction site eBay, according to federal indictments filed at the U.S. District Court in Honolulu. The eBay ad eventually led them to Hawaii and six Marines stationed there.

By September 2008, undercover agents bought eight scopes in a sting that indictments state netted the arrests of Ronald Abram and five others, including Abingdon, Va., native Cpl. Mark Allen Vaught. Agents traced the scopes, which had the serial numbers filed off, to a Marine base.

Honolulu-based Assistant U.S. Attorney Chris A. Thomas said by telephone that Ronald William Abram and two others have decided to fight the charges in civilian federal court. Vaught and three others will allow a military court to hear their cases, he said.

mowens@bristolnews.com | (276) 645-2549

Source: http://www.tricities.com/tri/news/local/article/federal_agents_tight-lipped_about_bluff_city_raid/22508/

Kaneohe Marine accused of burglary, auto theft

HonoluluAdvertiser.com

October 22, 2008

Kaneohe Marine accused of burglary, auto theft

Advertiser Staff

A 19-year-old Marine based at Kane‘ohe was charged yesterday with multiple offenses stemming from an alleged burglary early Sunday in Kaka‘ako.

Joseph Striegel was charged with second-degree burglary, first-degree criminal property damage, auto theft, leaving the scene of an accident, operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant and resisting arrest. His bail totals $20,000.

Striegel was arrested at 4:27 a.m. at Pensacola and Waimanu streets.

According to police, Striegel allegedly climbed to the rooftop and entered a business through an unlocked door. Striegel allegedly took a vehicle and drove it through the bay doors, striking another vehicle parked outside. He jumped from the moving vehicle and fled the scene.

Marine sentenced to five years for identity theft

Judge imprisons identity thief for victimizing fellow Marines

By Gene Park
gpark@starbulletin.com

Cpl. Daniel Alfieri deserved the five-year prison term he received yesterday for stealing the identities of fellow Kaneohe Marines while they were deployed to Iraq, one of his victims said.

“We will never forget what he did. He waited in ambush like a spider,” said Staff Sgt. Shawn Garrett, who added that the sentence was justified because of what appeared to be a calculated scheme by Alfieri pulled right after the Marines were deployed.

Alfieri had pleaded no contest to 14 counts of identity theft and eight other related charges for stealing the identities of five Kaneohe Marines.

Alfieri asked for a five-year probation, citing post-traumatic stress disorder and symptoms of bipolar disorder. He also cited his years of service in the Marines and his clean record.

Circuit Judge Randal Lee sentenced Alfieri to five years in prison, calling his claims of disorders “questionable.”

“In essence what the defendant did was steal from his own family,” said Lee, adding that giving a probation sentence would depreciate the seriousness of the crime.

Alfieri was accused of using personal information of his fellow Marines to apply for credit cards over a pay phone and the Internet. He stole a credit card already issued to one of the Marines and applied for another card using that Marine’s name.

He made various small purchases at grocery and retail stores, restaurants and gas stations.

Alfieri apologized to the victims yesterday and asked the judge for deferral of his no-contest plea, hoping to retain his clean record. He said he wanted to seek medical help for his mental state.

“My mind is truly not in a healthy place,” said the married father of two.

Deputy Prosecutor Chris Van Marter said prosecutors requested five years, and not the more than 50 years Alfieri could have received, because they recognized Alfieri’s years of military service and clean record.

Garrett was deployed in Iraq last year when his wife, Andrea, called him about a new credit card created under his name. Alfieri tried to open five credit cards under Garrett’s name and was able to create one.

A postal worker discovered the falsely created card before Alfieri was able to use it. But the damage was done, Garrett said. He began to worry about his wife’s safety when he should have been focused on the mission, he said.

“My head needs to be forward. I need to think about the Marines. I need to think about the mission,” Garrett said yesterday after the sentencing. “Not what is going to happen here — is my wife OK, or is she going to be able to pay bills … or is he going to come to my house and threaten my wife because she’s the one who turned him in?”

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2008/07/19/news/story09.html

Kaneohe Marine charged with sex assault of teen

Posted at 9:38 p.m., Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Kaneohe Marine charged with sex assault of teen

Advertiser Staff

A Kane’ohe-based Marine is being held in lieu of $250,000 bail tonight after being indicted on eight sex-assault involving a 14-year-old girl.

Hugo Ismael Valentin Jr., 39, had been charged Jan. 7 with one count of first-degree and two counts of third-degree sex assault.

He was arrested at Building 5071 on the Marine base today at 4:39 p.m. and booked on four counts each of first- and third-degree sex assault.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Jan/15/br/br5864701329.html

Nonstop war duty tests Marines

Nonstop war duty tests Marines

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer
KANE’OHE BAY – Less than four months ago, Lt. Col. Norm Cooling and his 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines were getting ready to leave Afghanistan after a seven-month deployment.

Many of the 1,000 Hawai’i Marines humped heavy loads through remote mountain valleys, camping for days on patrols.

Parts of Paktia Province fell to 20 below zero, and one 3/3 company operated practically in arctic conditions at 11,000 feet.

Their reward should have been seven months’ “stabilization” in Hawai’i. Instead, they’re on a hectic and compressed training schedule for a return late this winter or early spring to combat – this time in Iraq.

It’s the same tempo for some other units at Kane’ohe Bay, and the same story across the Corps – Marines preparing for repeat deployments with minimal breaks in between, and families fretting anew at home.

Cooling, 41, will be on his third war deployment in three years – Iraq, Afghanistan, Iraq.

The 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, which fought house-to-house through Fallujah last November and lost 46 Marines and sailors to the Iraq deployment, is in California receiving mountain warfare training for a deployment to Afghanistan in January or February.

The CH-53D Sea Stallion helicopter community, meanwhile, is preparing for squadron-sized rotations to Iraq, although a deployment order has not been received.

Sgt. Ted Ramos, 28, a 3/3 Marine, has a training schedule for Iraq that includes several days a week spent in the field; “fire and movement” range practice; road marches; trips to Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island, and a full month to be spent on desert training at Twentynine Palms in California between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Then the Afghanistan veteran goes to Iraq.

“At times it is stressful, and you almost want things to slow down to where you can catch your breath,” said Ramos, of San Antonio.

But the India Company Marine also says the high tempo is necessary to be prepared.

“It’s not just me that I’m worrying about. I have my Marines underneath me that I have to keep at the same pace,” Ramos said. “If we were to start to slack off, and slow the tempo down to where we’re not getting as much as we should out of training, I think it would really affect us when we got on the ground over there.”

In some respects, the Iraq deployment has been easier to prepare for than Afghanistan, Cooling said. Then, the battalion had only 3 1/2 months notice before heading to Afghanistan.

Still, Cooling describes the training regimen as “fast and furious.”

All companies stay in the field Tuesday through Thursday in the Kahuku training area, at the Kane’ohe Bay Marine Corps base, at Marine Corps Training Area Bellows, or at Dillingham Airfield.

The Marines practice live fire at Ulupau crater at the Marine Corps base, at Pu’uloa near ‘Ewa Beach, at the Army’s Schofield Barracks and, last year, at Makua Military Reservation – a use they hope to repeat.

There’s a lot of cooperation with Schofield – and some training schedule juggling. Because of Stryker Brigade projects at Schofield, some ranges are closed until 4:30 p.m., and the Army is using Marine Corps ranges, officials said.

Dan Geltmacher, the Marine Corps Base Hawai’i training area manager, said the Marines “are doing an awful lot of training in a short period of time.”

“There are challenges, just like any place,” he said. “But they are getting it done. They are doing their weapons qualifications here and they do maneuver training here. They do their basic annual qualifications that are required, combat or no, and then they go to California and get the final touches.”

Cooling said going to Twentynine Palms gives his battalion the opportunity to spend a full month in a desert training environment. There’s also a Military Operations on Urban Terrain site.

“The disadvantage is that’s another month of deployment away from our families,” he said. “It’s very hard on the families, but we’ve got to strike a balance between the training that’s necessary to get their husbands and fathers prepared for a combat zone and the time that they rightfully need to prepare their families (for a deployment).”

Approximately half the battalion that was in Afghanistan moved to different duty stations, 124 Marines extended to go to Iraq, and as much as 35 percent are new recruits.

Better training could come to O’ahu in the form of an “urban terrain” facility that would have mockups of European, Middle Eastern and Asian city blocks, an elevator shaft, a sewer system that could be navigated, and a prison.

A Military Operations on Urban Terrain site, planned for nearly 40 acres at Bellows, could cost up to $35 million but hasn’t been funded. It remains the Marines’ No. 1 priority for a training area improvement on O’ahu.

Ramos, who has a girlfriend in Texas who’s not at all happy he’s going on a second combat deployment, joined the Marines in 1996, got out in 2000, and re-enlisted in 2004 because he felt “it was a duty of mine to come back to the Marine Corps and do my part” for the country.

The two combat deployments and the intensive training in between haven’t been much of a problem for Ramos, but he isn’t pledging any longer term commitment to the Corps beyond this enlistment – at least for now.

“I look at it this way,” he said. “It all depends on how things are when I come back from Iraq. With the blessing of God I’ll come back with a good straight head and everything I left with, and then I’ll determine (my future) from that.”

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2005/Sep/25/ln/FP509250341.html

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