Military studies Waikane Valley bomb cleanup

The Honolulu Star Advertiser published an article about the progress of unexploded ordnance (UXO) cleanup in Waikane valley in Ko’olaupoko district of O’ahu.

Waikane is a lush valley that is very significant in Hawaiian legend and history.  The name refers to the waters of the great deity Kane. Sites in the valley are referred to in ancient chants about creation. As this is a land of flowing streams, there are extensive lo’i kalo (taro fields).

Waikane was granted to the Kamaka family during the Mahele. But land speculators like Lincoln McCandless acquired vast amounts of land in Waikane and other areas like Makua, allegedly through illegal or unethical means.

During World War II, the military leased Waikane lands for training and promised to return the land in its original condition.  When the lands were returned to the Kamaka family, Raymond Kamaka began farming and working with youth.   But the bombs kept turning up.  Instead of cleaning up as promised, the Marines condemned the land over the objections of the family.

In 2003, the Marines announced that they planned to conduct jungle warfare training in Waikane and held community meetings.  The community turned out in large numbers to protest the plan and to demand that the military clean up the land and return it to the Kamaka family. The Marine corps abandoned its training plans for Waikane.  Several years later, it began the administrative process for closing and cleaning up the range.

The surrounding lands were also affected by training, but since they are currently in private hands, a different program called the Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) program under the Army Corps of Engineers has the responsibility to conduct the ordnance removal.

The very fact that the munitions are being studied and removed is a win for the community.  What was once “too dangerous” and “too costly” is now within reach.  But the level of cleanup depends on the cost and feasibility analysis as well as the final land use.   This is where continued pressure is needed to ensure that the land is returned to Mr. Kamaka or to an entity that he designates to carry on the kuleana (responsibility) he solemnly swore to fulfill to his ancestors.

The Hawai’i congressional delegation can ensure that the cleanup is conducted to the highest level possible by ensuring that there is adequate funding to achieve the highest level of cleanup.

There are currently two cleanup operations underway in Waikane.  Under the Army Corps of Engineers FUDS program, a Restoration Advisory Board (RAB) has been established to oversee its portion of the cleanup. Under the Marine Corps, a separate Restoration Advisory Board has been established.  These RABs include military, government regulators and community members and provide input to the military on the cleanup process.   The meetings are open to the public.

The Army Corps of Engineers FUDS RAB will meet Wednesday, June 22, 2011 from 7-9 pm in the Waiahole Elementary School Cafeteria.

Below are excerpts from the Honolulu Star Advertiser article. The time line at the end has an error: the Marine Corps did not fence the Kamaka parcel in 1992 after it condemned the land.  It installed a fence some time after 2003, only after the community blasted the Marines for being hypocritical, i.e. claiming that the land was so dangerous it had to be condemned but never enclosing it with a fence.

Military studies Waikane Valley bomb cleanup

A Windward Oahu area littered with old munitions is being looked at by both the Marines and the Army

By William Cole

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 19, 2011

WILLIAM COLE / WCOLE@STARADVERTISER.COM
Marine Corps officials and an ordnance removal technician view Waikane Valley in the vicinity of the ordnance impact area.
WILLIAM COLE / WCOLE@STARADVERTISER.COM
The Marine Corps said it is spending $1.37 million to investigate the 187-acre impact area in Waikane Valley where the majority of the munitions are located and to develop a feasibility study for cleanup options that is expected to be released in the fall. Here, a warning sign is posted at the edge of the Marine Corps’ impact area

More Photos

Up a rutted road in jungly Waikane Valley, past the old Ka Mauna ‘o ‘Oliveta Church, through a locked gate and beyond a security fence is the former Kamaka family farm, the now-defunct military training range that replaced it, and the long-held hope — going on decades now — that the land can be returned to the agricultural and cultural place it used to be.

Waikane Valley is one of dozens of former military training sites in Hawaii undergoing the slow, arduous and sometimes painful process that goes along with demilitarization.

Among those many sites, Waikane is considered by some to be a special place, and there’s been momentum in recent years to clean up the munitions that litter it.

The Marine Corps and Army Corps of Engineers are each conducting studies on removing ordnance from a total of 1,061 acres in Waikane Valley. Citizen advisory groups are asking Congress for millions in cleanup funds.

“Things seem to be moving in a good direction — at least things seem to be moving, which is a good direction,” said Windward resident and attorney David Henkin, who is on the two restoration advisory boards for the land.

Land in and around the former training area is valued as a cultural and natural resource. The city thought highly enough of the land in 1998 to spend $3.5 million for 500 acres to the southeast of the Marine Corps land that are intended to become the Waikane Valley Nature Park. A private landowner, Paul Zweng, bought 1,400 acres — part of which is in the former training area — for a proposed Ohulehule Forest Conservancy to preserve and restore the endemic flora and fauna in the valley, officials said.

[…]

Despite the potential risk, off-road vehicles tear up Waikane Stream, and pig hunters cut through the fence that surrounds the 187 acres still owned by the Marine Corps.

Between 1943 and 1953 the Army leased more than 2,000 acres in the Waiahole and Waikane valleys for jungle training; small arms, artillery and mortar fire; and aerial bombing, according to a recent Navy investigation.

In 1953, the Marine Corps took over, leasing 1,061 acres for live-fire training. The report said live fire “apparently” stopped in the early 1960s, and that the lease was terminated in 1976.

A Marine Corps clearance effort in 1976 removed 24,000 pounds of practice ordnance and fragments, and 42 unexploded munitions.

In 1984 the Marines came back and recovered 480 3.5-inch rockets from what is known as the Waikane Valley Impact Area. A 2009 site inspection turned up 66 shoulder-fired rockets, one 2.36-inch rocket and three rifle grenades.

The unexploded ordnance, or “UXO,” as it’s known, was so thick the Marines abandoned in 2003 a plan to conduct blank-fire jungle training in the valley, saying it was too dangerous.

Despite that, community members working with the military on continuing studies say there’s progress and hope that Congress will provide cleanup funding.

[…]

Two remediation efforts are taking place in Waikane Valley. The Marine Corps said it is spending $1.37 million to investigate the 187-acre impact area where the majority of the munitions are located and to develop a feasibility study for cleanup options that is expected to be released in the fall.

The Army Corps of Engineers, meanwhile, is working on 874 adjoining acres that contain fewer munitions as part of the FUDS program. In addition to a $1.34 million study, the Army Corps said it has a $1.94 million ordnance clearance effort under way with Environet Inc. focusing on two parcels totaling 44 acres.

Among the decisions the Marine Corps will have to make is whether to clean up the 187 acres it still owns and to what degree, as well as what to do with the land afterward.

While some community members have complained about the number of plans put forth and the length of time for the Marine Corps to address the issue, an email response from Marine Corps Base Hawaii to the Star-Advertiser said the latest “munitions response program,” which began in 2008, “is detailed and takes time to ensure potential risks to human health and the environment are thoroughly identified and appropriate cleanup action is selected.”

People have been injured and killed by mishandled munitions in Waikane Valley, though there have been no incidents recently, according to the Navy “remedial investigation” draft report issued in March.

In 1944, two people were killed and two others were injured when a 60 mm mortar discovered in the valley accidentally detonated, the report said.

Three children were injured in 1963 when a “souvenir” rifle grenade reportedly discovered in Waikane Valley exploded after it was thrown against a wall. There have been no other reports of injury attributed to munitions found in the valley, the report said.

Raymond Kamaka, 72, said his family owned and farmed the Marine Corps land as far back as 1850 through a deed from King Kamehameha III, and he still lays claim to it.

His great-great-great-grandmother, Racheal Lahela, who came from Waikane, was a half sister of Queen Liliuokalani, Kamaka said.

Kamaka recalled playing in the valley as a kid. “It was our playground. Up there we used to swim,” he said. He remembers three ancient heiau.

The government later said it needed the land for wartime training, leased it from the Hawaiian family, and said it would clean it up and return it afterward.

The lease was terminated in 1976, and the Marines conducted several cleanups. Kamaka, a one-time professional wrestler, returned to farm in the early 1980s. He grew taro and raised pigs and brought in schoolchildren for visits.

When munitions were found on the property’s higher reaches, the military condemned the land in 1989. Much of the family settled for $2.3 million in 1994 — but not Raymond Kamaka.

“Nobody settled with me,” said Kamaka, who claims to be the only rightful heir.

The ensuing years have been “hell,” Kamaka said. “I lost everything.” He went to jail for two years in disputes with the government over the land, he said.

He still expects to farm on the family land again one day.

“Am I gonna come back? Yes,” he said.

Kajihiro, who also is program director for the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker organization that supports Native Hawaiian rights, said “there is some political will to do some cleanup (on the Marine Corps land). To what level is a question of cost.”

“We’re saying it should be cleaned up to the highest level possible to allow the broadest number of uses,” Kajihiro said. He added that those uses “need to be mindful of, and consistent with, Uncle Raymond Kamaka and his family’s vision and uses of the land — which were agricultural and cultural uses.”

LOOKING BACK

Waikane Valley’s history as a military training range:

Early 1940s
U.S. Army leases more than 2,000 acres in Waiahole and Waikane valleys and uses the property for jungle training, artillery, mortar, small arms fire, maneuvers and as a bombing range for air-to-ground fire.

1944
Two people are killed and two are injured by a 60-millimeter mortar discovered in the valley.

1953
Marine Corps leases 1,061 acres. Training includes small-arms fire, 3.5-inch rockets and medium artillery.

Early 1960s
Marines stop use of live fire.

1963
Three children are injured when a “souvenir” rifle grenade is thrown against a wall and explodes.

1976
Marines conduct ordnance clearance sweeps.

1984
Marines conduct additional ordnance clearance sweeps and remove 480 3.5-inch rockets.

1989
U.S. government acquires title to the 187-acre ordnance impact area.

1992
A perimeter chain-link fence is installed around the impact area.

2002
Marines propose conducting blank-fire training on the site.

2003
Marines abandon the idea when a study finds too much danger from unexploded ordnance.

2010
Marines conduct a “remedial investigation” on the 187-acre Waikane Valley Impact Area.

2011
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is investigating ordnance on 874 adjoining acres and removing munitions from 44 acres within that parcel.

Source: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; Marine Corps

 

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.

Marines train for Afghanistan war in Waimanalo

Marines prepare for Afghanistan in Waimanalo “village”

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 15, 2009

Sgt. Michael Osburn cautiously led his squad of Kaneohe Marines into the remote village.

With him was Lance Cpl. Robert Bacigalupo. Like many in his squad of 14 Marines, this was Bacigalupo’s first time in a combat zone. The town was littered with plastic bottles, discarded car tires, rags, trash and items Marines call “battlefield clutter.” Loud music from a nearby mosque echoed through the town square.

Osburn, relying on his experiences from earlier Afghan and Iraq combat tours, reached for a pack of Marlboros in his combat vest as he began his “meet and greets” with the locals in the town square. He’s learned that cigarettes were the quickest way to prove that his squad’s intentions were friendly.

As he met with the town’s leaders, an insurgent sniper cut down three of his Marines. Osburn quickly apologized to the mayor for his abrupt departure and turned to handle the crisis.

The crisis and the Afghani village, however, were not real, but rather a combat drill at the Marine’s two-year-old urban warfare training site in Waimanalo last week.

Here Kaneohe’s “Lava Dogs” were preparing for a seven-month deployment to Afghanistan.

Before they leave for Afghanistan, Osburn and the more than 900 Kaneohe Marines belonging to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, will be participating in numerous battle drills and combat scenarios at Kaneohe Bay, Waimanalo, Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island and the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center at Twentynine Palms, Calif., about halfway between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

This will be the battalion’s fifth combat tour. It went to Afghanistan in 2006 and was sent to Iraq in 2004, 2007 and again last year.

Osburn, who deployed to Afghanistan in 2006, said parts of the country resemble the training areas in the mountains near Kahuku.

Last week Bravo Company, with about 180 Marines, completed part of its first phase of training at Bellows Air Force Station, where shipping containers have been used to replicate an Afghan town. The containers are painted tan with windows and doors cut into them. Some are stacked on top of one another to transform them into two-story buildings, which are supposed to be Afghan schools, government offices and shops. There was even a turquoise wooden dome added to one of the shipping container complexes to make it look like a mosque.

The Marines get a quick critique after each exercise. After one session, Staff Sgt. Lee LeGrande, an exercise controller, praised Osburn for using cigarettes to get closer to the “villagers” and for apologizing to the mayor before breaking off his courtesy visit.

However, LeGrande also criticized the squad for failing to get approval before firing on the “mosque” where the Marines believed the sniper had been hiding. He also cautioned the squad to be more careful before aiding the wounded Marines or they could end up becoming a victim of the sniper.

Chief Warrant Officer Craig Marshall, a battalion gunner who has done four Iraqi combat tours, said during the first phase Marines are taught basics of the culture where they will be deployed; procedures and techniques necessary to man a vehicle checkpoint and conduct patrols through villages and towns; and ways to identify the various homemade bombs used by insurgents.

Nearly 50 Afghan nationals were recruited in Southern California and brought to Hawaii. They not only participated in checkpoint and village exercises but also prepared Afghani dishes for the Marines to sample.

The Kaneohe Marines will spend a couple of weeks at Pohakuloa later this summer where intense live-fire exercises will be held. They will then return to Waimanalo and live and work for several days in the same training area, which will be turned into an Afghan forward operating base. In September the 1st Battalion will spend nearly a month at Twentynine Palms before going on leave and deploying to Afghanistan at the end of the year.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090615_Marines_prepare_for_Afghanistan_at_a_village_in_Waimanalo.html

Marine recruiter charged with pimping 14 year old girl

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090603/ap_on_re_us/us_recruiter_sex_charges

Marine recruiter charged with pimping girl, 14

AP

Tue Jun 2, 11:04 pm ET

HEMET, Calif. – Police have arrested a U.S. Marine Corps recruiter on charges of felony pimping and kidnapping and are looking into whether he used sex with a 14-year-old girl to entice potential recruits.

Staff Sgt. Bryan Damone Cunningham, 33, of San Pedro pleaded not guilty to seven felonies last Thursday after police in Orange discovered the teenage girl in a car with Cunningham and two other men. The two men, ages 18 and 19, were potential Marine recruits, police said.

The girl, who has since been returned to her parents in Hemet, told police that she met Cunningham online and had sex with all three men. She also told police Cunningham wanted her to work as a prostitute and had tried to take her to Los Angeles County against her will.

Police said they are trying to determine if Cunningham may have been using the girl to entice Marine recruits.

“It’s not proven … but when you look at it, this is a grown man, a Marine staff sergeant,” said Hemet police Lt. Joe Nevarez. “Why would he be taking them out to have sex with a 14-year-old girl?”

Cunningham’s attorney, Dane Levy, did not immediately return a call seeking comment Tuesday.

The two potential Marine recruits face felony charges on having sex with a minor.

Cunningham is being held on $1 million bail and has a court hearing June 18, said John Hall, a spokesman for the Riverside County district attorney’s office.

Hemet is east-southeast of Los Angeles.

Another US Marine accused of raping Filipina Victim shows clear sign of sexual assault-lawyer

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/nation/view/20090514-204984/Another-US-Marine-accused-of-raping-Filipina

Another US Marine accused of raping Filipina

Victim shows clear sign of sexual assault-lawyer
By Lira Dalangin-Fernandez, Nikko Dizon
Reporter

INQUIRER.net Philippine Daily Inquirer

Posted date: May 14, 2009

MANILA, Philippines-(UPDATE 5) Another United States Marine has been accused of raping another Filipino woman, this time a 22-year-old-university student, whose lawyer described her as having showed “clear signs” having been sexually assaulted.

The woman, identified to the media only as “Vanessa” to protect her real identity, broke down as she read a prepared statement narrating her ordeal with the American soldier.

She said the alleged rape happened last April 19 inside a hotel in Makati City.

Lawyer Evalyn Ursua said there were “clear signs” Vanessa was raped.

“It was very clear she was raped. It was very violent. She had marks on her neck after the incident,” Ursua said.

However, the lawyer said that while Vanessa did not intend to pursue the case for now, they were prepared with documents to support a possible case such as medico-legal report.

“She just wants to bring out her pain and hurt. In a way, it’s a form of justice,” said Ursua.

The victim said she first met the soldier, alias John Jones, on April 10 when he approached her in a club at The Fort in Taguig, where she was going out with several friends.

“Jones” introduced himself as a US Marine and got her cellular phone number.

That night, upon Jones’s invitation, Vanessa together with her friends went to his hotel and had conversations with him. They went home the next day.

On April 18, she said she got a text message from Jones inviting her to go out. That same night, Vanessa was invited by a cousin and a male friend to go out. But after finding out that the place they entered was a “girly bar,” she asked her cousin and her friend to transfer to a wholesome bar.

They got to the bar at 3:15 a.m. of April 19. Few minutes after, she received a text message from Jones asking her whereabouts. Jones followed her there at about 3:30 a.m. accompanied by three women.

Jones asked her to go to the five-star hotel where he and his friends were billeted. He also told her that his girlfriend and other friends were in his room.

When they got to the hotel room, Vanessa found out there was no one else there. Jones told her that his friends were coming in five minutes.

They sat for a few minutes and chatted. After a while, Vanessa told Jones that she wanted to go home because Jones’s girlfriend might not like it seeing another woman in his room.

Jones suddenly stood up and slapped her, shouting at her, “Why do you do that?”

Vanessa told Jones anew that she wanted to leave and went towards the door but Jones lifted her and hurled her unto the bed. Jones repeatedly slapped her using his left hand while his other hand was pressing on her neck.

Vanessa resisted and pushed Jones, while cursing him. But Jones was already on top of her, kissing her lips, and breasts.

“Nagawa ni Jones na ipasok ang kanyang ari sa akin. Patuloy ko syang pinapalo pero sinasangga niya ito. Maya-maya, napagod na si Jones, tumayo at kinuha ang kanyang cellphone. Dali dali akong tumayo [Jones was able to have sexual intercourse with me. I continued hitting him but he was parrying my blows. After a while, Jones got tired, stood up, and took his cellphone. I immediately stood up],” according to the fact sheet she read during the press conference.

She broke down after reading this.

Vanessa said she then immediately collected her clothes and got dressed inside the bathroom. Jones tried to prevent her again from leaving the room, but Vanessa insisted.

When she got out of the room and was near the elevator, Jones followed her and she overheard him talking on the phone and asking for security personnel “to attend to a lost girl.”

Vanessa immediately sought help from hotel personnel when she got to the lobby. A female personnel, who introduced herself as head of the security, assisted her. She told the personnel that she was raped.

Vanessa called up her sister and narrated the incident. Soon after, they came to pick her up and went straight to the police station to report the incident.

At about 10 a.m. of April 19, she went to a hospital for a medico-legal examination. The next day, she went to Gabriela to seek their help.

The militant group said in statement that they were able to confirm that the man was a US soldier listed in hotel records as “from Joint US Military Assistance Group (Jusmag)/Balikatan.”

In 2005, a Filipina identified only as “Nicole” also accused a US Marine, Lance Corporal Daniel Smith, of raping her in Subic.

In 2006, Smith was convicted and sentenced to up to 40 years by a local court, which he appealed before the Court of Appeals.

Earlier this year, “Nicole” recanted her allegation.

Smith was acquitted by the appellate court last month.

Sex assault in military up 8 percent

April 12, 2009

Most Hawaii Army sex assaults go unreported, but military better in raising awareness of problem

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

A female sailor reported being raped aboard the Pearl Harbor-based cruiser USS Port Royal while it was docked in the United Arab Emirates. A male enlisted sailor accused of the crime was found not guilty at a court-martial.

An Air Force lieutenant colonel was accused of making wrongful sexual contact with a male staff sergeant in Afghanistan. The officer received punishment of forfeiture of $3,704 pay a month for two months, and a reprimand.

A female enlisted Marine said she was fondled by a male service member while sleeping on the floor at another Marine’s house. Civilian authorities declined to prosecute, and the accused was acquitted at court-martial.

Those are just three of the 2,923 reports of sexual assault involving U.S. service members received by the Pentagon during fiscal 2008, which ended last September.

Required by Congress, the recently released annual statistics on sexual assault in the military showed an 8 percent increase in reports over the year before – a rise officials say reflects an increase in awareness and reporting of such crimes, but not necessarily a jump in assaults themselves.

Over a five-year period, the Army has seen a general increase in the numbers of confirmed sexual assaults involving Schofield Barracks soldiers, with six in fiscal 2004, seven in 2005, 26 in 2006, nine in 2007 and 10 in 2008, according to the post.

The year 2006 was an anomaly because a change in reporting procedures and laws resulted in a much higher number, officials said.

“We believe the increased number in reporting (across the Defense Department) means service members feel more comfortable reporting the crime and are getting the care they need,” said Gail McGinn, the Pentagon’s deputy undersecretary of defense for plans.

There were 165 sexual assault reports in Iraq and Afghanistan. President Obama declared April as Sexual Assault Awareness month.

Pete Geren, the secretary of the Army, expressed regret over the 4 percent increase in reported Army sexual assault cases in 2008 – for a total of 1,584 – saying the trend indicates “the Army still has much work to do to succeed in creating a climate where soldiers treat each other with dignity and respect.”

most unreported

Treatment professionals say the military is doing a much better job of acknowledging, responding to and trying to prevent sex assaults within its ranks, but there is little debate that such crimes are still highly unreported.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office last August found that the Defense Department still faced some challenges in implementing sexual assault prevention and response programs, for reasons that included a failure of a minority of commanders to support the programs.

Additionally, the GAO reported that at the 14 installations where it did its survey, 103 service members said they had been sexually assaulted in the preceding 12 months, but only 51 had reported it.

The government agency found that factors that discouraged service members from reporting a sexual assault included the belief that nothing would be done, fear of ostracism, harassment or ridicule, and concern that peers would gossip.

The Army in Hawai’i acknowledged that “as it stands now, most of these crimes go unreported.” The service said that as the Army’s campaign to reduce sex assault gains more momentum, it expects that increasing reports of sexual assault will continue.

In abstracts of the reported sexual assaults across the military, alcohol use often is an accompanying factor. Military officials say an attacker often is an acquaintance.

“We look for that rapist as being the guy or gal in a black mask with a knife hiding around the corner, when in fact, for the most part, it’s somebody you know,” said Col. Dean Wolford, the 15th Airlift Wing vice commander at Hickam Air Force Base.

Wolford said the issue of sexual assault “is not centered solely on the Air Force or Army, Navy or Marines. It’s in our society in general and that’s something that we as a society need to combat.

“It’s that attitude of date rape being date-light rape. A rape is a rape. An assault is an assault, and our society has to have a better awareness of that.”

The Navy said it recorded 418 sex assault cases service-wide in fiscal 2007, and 489 in 2008.

In the majority of 188 Navy investigations completed in 2008, the suspected attackers were mostly male active-duty members under age 35, according to reports.

“A significant number” could not be prosecuted because of issues, including the attacker not being known, the victim recanting, or a victim asking that charges not be brought.

Of 42 allegations of rape or aggravated sexual assault, nine resulted in court-martial charges, nine went through non-judicial punishment, and no action was taken in 24 cases due to lack of evidence, the Navy said.

Hickam’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office said it handled 14 sexual assault cases in fiscal 2007, nine cases in 2008, and seven cases so far this fiscal year, which began in October.

Some victims may have gone to security forces or the Office of Special Investigation and are not reflected in the totals.

There are about 7,200 airmen assigned to Hickam, officials said.

Hickam cases

Both the Navy and Marines would not provide Hawai’i data for sexual assault trends, with the Marines saying the information had to be obtained through a federal Freedom of Information Act request.

Wolford, the vice wing commander, said the Hickam numbers “are very concerning. One sexual assault is concerning – much less seven (so far this fiscal year).”

But he also said he thinks the Air Force, in general, is doing a very good job in making strides to combat sexual assault crime.

“We want to make sure we don’t lose sight of this from a leadership perspective, so this is what we consider a commander’s program,” he said.

In November, Wolford attended an Air Force sexual assault prevention response summit in Washington, D.C.

Victim advocates, who can be a civilian, officer or enlisted airman, are in place at Hickam as a source of support for sex abuse victims, Wolford said.

Newly arriving airmen – and their families – receive sex assault prevention briefings.

Author and filmmaker Angela Shelton – who was herself sexually abused – appeared on base last year. Wolford said the base is bringing in “Voices of Men,” a multimedia play that deals with sexual assault and consent.

The Army said it has increased staffing in Hawai’i, with additional victim advocacy/sexual assault prevention specialists to provide training and counseling.

The Army also said its “Sex Signals” tour will be in Hawai’i from June 8 to 11, with 12 performances using improvisation, humor and audience participation to discuss dating stereotypes, consent and sexual assault.

Confidential option

In 2005, in an effort to encourage sex assault victims to come forward, the Pentagon instituted “restricted reporting,” which allows a victim to confidentially receive help without the initiation of a criminal investigation.

Adriana Ramelli, executive director of the Sex Abuse Treatment Center in Honolulu, said the stress of combat deployments can play into domestic violence and sex assault, but she, too, said it is difficult to identify the main reason for the increasing reports in the military.

“In the civilian sector as well, sometimes the numbers go up, and we don’t have any idea why,” she said. “We hope we have created a safer environment for victims to come forward.”

Ramelli said the military has done a “very good job” of enhancing its sexual assault prevention and response in the past five years.

“I still think there is still a serious problem,” she said, “but I do think that the military is taking a serious look at what is going on and is trying to implement programs that are to the benefit of victims and families.”

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090412/NEWS08/904120375/1001/LOCALNEWSFRONT

Bellows Landfill cleaned up?

Waimanalo community leaders invite supporters to attend the ceremony for the blessing of the fishpond:

Saturday, February 21, 2009, Meet up at 8:45 am at the Jack in the Box in Waimanalo. Then proceed to the Bellows gate.  Hawaiian flags and signs encouraged.  Bring cameras.  Urge the return of the fishpond to Kanaka Maoli. Contact: Kawehi at kawehi11@yahoo.com.

The military issued a press release today claiming that the clean up of a landfill at Bellows Beach in Waimanalo was complete.  See the article in today’s Honolulu Advertiser below.  But there’s more to this story.   The Waimanalo community fought to get the site cleaned up.  The Air Force initially planned to cap it.  But a clue to what may have tipped the scale to get the clean  up moving is contained in the article:

The Marine Corps then requested funding to remove the landfill in order to use the previously unusable training area

On a recent visit to the clean up site sponsored by the Waimanalo Restoration Advisory Board, we saw the oily water and soil that was excavated from the beach.  We also saw remnants of a loko i’a, an ancient Hawaiian fishpond, the first actual physical evidence of fishponds in Waimanalo to corroborate oral histories.  However the walls of the loko i’a were buried under other parts of the base and would not be restored, only reburied.   The military apparently used the walls of the fishpond to contain their landfill during the 1940s. The Waimanalo community is calling for the fishpond to be restored and returned to the Kanaka Maoli people.

We also learned that practice munitions and the shells from live munitions were found improperly disposed of in the landfill.  When asked, the contractors said that they did not test for the chemical constituents from munitions.  So we don’t know whether the soil and water were contaminated with munitions residue.  The other shocking news was that the contaminated soil from the landfill was being trucked to Nanakuli and dumped in the PVT landfill.  Wai’anae residents were unhappy when they learned that military contamination was being moved from one Hawaiian community to another.

There are several other contaminated sites in Waimanalo. One that the Air Force has refused to address is a cave known from Hawaiian legends, that was used for a dump.   Despite persistent efforts of the Kanaka Maoli community to restore the cave, the Air Force insists that it cannot reopen a project that has been closed without special legislation to do so.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Bellows Beach landfill cleanup done

Advertiser Staff

Kaneohe Marines, Air Force personnel and Congresswoman Mazie K. Hirono will be at a brief blessing ceremony tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. to mark completion of the clean-up of a former landfill at Marine Corps Training Area Bellows, the Marines said today in a news release.

The landfill, known as “LF24” was located on property previously assigned to the U.S. Air Force, then transferred to the Marine Corps in 1999. As part of the transfer process, the Air Force was required to conduct environmental investigations.

These investigations determined the site was not eligible for Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) funding. The Marine Corps then requested funding to remove the landfill in order to use the previously unusable training area, as well as prevent any buried refuse at the site from unintentionally eroding into the ocean.

Waimanalo residents lobbied the military services to clean up the site, and the requested funds were eventually made available in August, 2007, when Hirono helped earmark $2M in Marine Corps funds to clean up the World War II era landfill. The Marines received the $2M in December 2007 and immediately transferred these funds to the Air Force, whose familiarity with the site and expertise were well documented.

The Air Force selected CH2M Hill as the contractor for the clean-up based on their qualifications and familiarity with the site. Part of the contract emphasized sub-contracting local small businesses. In all, of the 13 sub-contractors used for the project, 11 were based in Waimanalo or the Hawaiian Islands.

The Air Force’s Environmental Restoration department at Hickam Air Force Base led the project and hosted Marines from Marine Corps Base Hawaii, the Hawaii Dept. of Health, members of the Waimanalo community and other key organization personnel as part of a Key Stakeholders Working Group which helped with project oversight.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090220/BREAKING01/90220072

Amphibious Assault Vehicle Sinking off Waimanalo

Here are several archived news stories about the Marine Corps Amphibious Assault vehicle that sank off Waimanalo. The original URLs and videos are no longer available for two of the stories:

http://archives.starbulletin.com/content/20090114_Newswatch
POSTED: Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Marines look into vehicle’s sinking

The Marines are investigating what caused a $2 million amphibious vehicle to sink about 160 yards off Bellows Beach during a training exercise on Monday.

No one was injured during the incident, which occurred at 6:30 p.m.

Maj. Alan Crouch, a Marine spokesman, said the tracked vehicle was carrying three Marines at the time. It was one of seven vehicles taking part in the exercise.

A release from the Marine Corps Base Hawaii said a combat assault company’s assault amphibian platoon was conducting scheduled water operations when it encountered a swell about 1,200 yards offshore.

The 46,000-pound AAV or assault amphibian vehicle began taking on water and lost power while attempting to reach the shore, the statement said.

The three Marines onboard were safely evacuated to another assault vehicle participating in the exercise.

As a safety precaution an oil spill containment boom was placed around the area where the vehicle sank in 15 feet of water.

Navy salvage divers were to return to the area today to determine how to raise the sunken vehicle. Marine Corps officials hope to refloat the vehicle and send it the Barstow Marine Corps Logistical Base in California for repairs.

The 131/2-foot-long vehicles, capable of carrying 25 passengers and a crew of three, are used by Marines to move from ship to shore. It has a maximum speed of 45 mph on land and 8 mph in the water.

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From KHON:

Salvaging an Assault Amphibian Vehicle

By Ron Mizutani

Story Updated: Jan 14, 2009 at 6:22 PM HST

A diving and salvage unit from Marine Corps Base Hawaii returned to Bellows Wednesday to recover an Assault Amphibian Vehicle that sank Monday night. But is there more to the story than what’s being shared by the military?

Sources told KHON2 diesel fuel leaked from the A-A-V but those in charge of the salvage project say that’s not true.

As divers prepped salvage equipment at Bellows, beach goers watched with interest and questions.

“There’s an offshore reef which is about probably 300 yards out and I always wondered whether there was a puka that they came through that was set aside for them to come through or whether they were just hoping that they wouldn’t hit it when they came in,” said Tom Holowach of Kailua.

Monday night, marines did the latter. The incident happened about 6:30 during water operations — similar to these exercises in 2002. According to military officials, a wave hit the AAV about 12-hundred yards offshore causing it to strike the reef. The vehicle started taking on water and lost power while attempting to reach the shoreline. It sank less than 175 yards from shore. All three marines escaped injury.

“So they pulled another vehicle along side it, moved all the personnel and gear to the other vehicle and attempted to hook up to tow but the vehicle was under water,” said Commander Christopher Kim of Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

“No fuel is emitting from the vehicle and we have been diving on it through out yesterday and today and continue to monitor and she’s pretty much intact,” said Gordon Olayvar of the Federal Conservation Law Enforcement.

But sources close to the investigation say an unknown amount of diesel leaked from the vehicle. Environmental watchdog Carroll Cox received a similar tip.

“I received a call saying there is diesel fuel being emitted — didn’t tell me the volume of the quantity,” said Cox.

“Obviously one of the things of concern for us is fuel making sure that the fuel is contained,” said Olayvar.

Cox says residents should not be satisfied.

“No we should not be,” said Cox. “The concern I have is a boom is placed here and if you look at it the way its configured — that’s not going to serve any purpose — it should be completed contained. I don’t believe that the military has been as transparent in this situation as they should be.”

Crews expect to recover the A-A-V Wednesday night. The state will then determine if there’s been any reef impact.

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Marines Attempt to Re-Float Amphibious Vehicle
Written by KGMB9 News – news@kgmb9.com
January 15, 2009 06:39 PM

A complicated recovery project is going on in Waimanalo.

A team of marines is trying to re-float a 28-ton amphibious assault vehicle from a reef off Bellows Beach.

That’s where it sank on Monday, after a wave knocked it over.

Wednesday, crews tried to float the tank and tow it to shore.

But they had to go back Thursday and had better luck.

It took a few hours to get it off the sea floor.

The Marines are towing it in right now.

Amphibious vehicle sinks off Waimanalo

Military Vehicle Sinks During Exercise

Written by KGMB9 News – news@kgmb9.com

January 13, 2009 07:10 PM

Strong surf is being blamed for a Marine Assault Amphibian Vehicle sinking off the Bellows Training area.

The AAV, similar to this one sunk just after 6:30 Monday night.

Military officials say no one was hurt, and that a large wave caused the vehicle to hit the reef.

The AAV then started to take on water before it lost power. It sank about 200 yards off shore.

The coast guard is helping with the recovery operation to pull the vehicle out of the water.

Kaneohe Marine arrested for burglary, auto theft

Posted at 11:27 p.m., Tuesday, October 21, 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.

Source: Honoluluadvertiser.com

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