| COMMENTARY: STOLEN
VALOR IS OFFENSIVE, BUT IS IT A CRIME?
Jonathan Turley: " ... In the end,
true valor cannot be stolen. It can only be earned. What is left
are pathetic pretenders ... "
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... Jonathan Turley's bio is here ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Turley
And, more about Stolen Valor is
here ...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=stolen+valor&op=ph
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Stolen Valor is Offensive, But
Is It A Crime?
http://jonathanturley.org/2010/03/09/stolen-valor-i
s-offensive-but-is-it-a-crime/
We have been following a number of “stolen valor” cases recently
on this blog. The crime of falsely claiming medals and military
service is all the rage. Even journalists have been implicated as
with Darrow “Duke” Tully, publisher of Arizona Republic and close
associate to Sen. John McCain. Tully resigned as publisher after
it was learned that he did not fly 100 combat missions over
Vietnam, crash a fighter in Korea, or receive the Purple Heart,
Distinguished Flying Cross and the Vietnam Cross of Gallantry.
Indeed, he never served at all. Below is today’s column on the
subject and I will be discussing it today on NPR’s Talk of the
Nation.
Across the country, police are rounding up a growing class of
felons: valor thieves. With two wars, valor has become a valuable
commodity for individuals who want to skip enlistment and combat
and go directly to the hero adoration stage. Under the Stolen
Valor Act of 2005, it is a federal crime to claim unearned
military decorations or medals. While widely popular, these
prosecutions raise constitutional questions of free speech. From
judges to admirals to bank employees, citizens are facing
accusations of felonious bravado.
When President Bush signed the act into law, he was probably
thinking of people such as Steve Burton. Burton, of Palm Springs,
Calif., appeared at his high school reunion in 2009 in the uniform
of a Marine lieutenant colonel supporting enough medals to make a
Soviet general blush. Unfortunately for him, he ran into a former
classmate who is a real Navy commander, and she reported the
possible fraudulent medals, including a Purple Heart, Bronze Star
and the Navy Cross. His claim to have fought in
Afghanistan
and Iraq also drew suspicion.
Burton actually works in a bank. He is one of many people who
struggle to reinvent themselves in a more heroic image with the
help of Internet sites selling uniforms, medals and ribbons. They
are the modern-day Walter Mittys — bank tellers and office workers
who want to snatch notoriety from the jaws of mediocracy.
From 2005 to 2009, federal prosecutors charged 48 people under the
Stolen Valor Act.
Ironically, it is often the irresistible impulse to add medals and
heroic accounts that prove the undoing of the faux warriors. Last
month, Michael Patrick McManus was arrested after a veteran
spotted him at the December party for Houston Mayor-elect Annise
Parker. McManus was wearing an Army uniform supporting a virtually
solid front of decorations, from parachute wings to the Purple
Heart to two distinguished service crosses and other decorations.
Most notable was a medal around his neck that appeared to make him
a Commander of the British Empire.
Notable ‘insolence’
McManus might have found a sympathetic judge in Michael F.
O’Brien. The Illinois circuit judge claimed not one but two medals
of honor — with a display in chambers for visitors. It was only
after he applied for Medal of Honor license plates in 1992 that he
was eventually uncovered and forced to resign from the bench or
face prosecution.
Some imposters served but gave themselves post-service promotions.
David Weber was a Marine staff sergeant but later promoted himself
by adopting the uniform of a retired two-star major general with
two Purple Hearts. He pleaded guilty in January in San Diego.
George Washington himself created the forerunner of the Purple
Heart for those who have “given of his blood in the defense of his
homeland” and declared that “should any who are not entitled to
these honors have the insolence to assume the badges of them, they
shall be severely punished.”
While most people, no doubt, share the anger and disgust with
people claiming such honors, the question is where to draw the
line between free
speech
and criminal conduct. Citizens have a right to burn an American
flag as a form of protected speech. However, if they do so while
wearing a single falsely claimed medal, they can be prosecuted. If
Congress can criminalize such claims, it could make half of the
pick-up lines used in bars across the country crimes. It could
theoretically criminalize other false claims from architects to
accountants to anthropologists.
Where to draw the line
Moreover, if Congress can criminalize the wearing of false medals,
it could theoretically criminalize claims of military service or
the use of military symbols under the same authority.
Craig Missakian, a California prosecutor, insists that Congress
can ensure prosecution of such cases under the Constitution’s
grant of authority to raise and support an army, and that
includes, by extension, “protecting the worth and value of these
medals.”Yet, such an interpretation would defy any meaningful
limits on Congress’ ability to criminalize acts. In the past, a
useful line has been drawn between simple acts of false bravado
and false statements used to secure financial gain. The latter
cases are routinely prosecuted as simple fraud. The Stolen Valor
Act is obviously intended for other cases, where people wear
medals for their simple adoration and public acclaim.
In pending cases, two men are challenging the constitutionality of
the Stolen Valor Act. Water-district board member Xavier Alvarez
of Pomona, Calif., made the mistake of claiming to be a retired
Marine and recipient of the Medal of Honor during a public meeting
in 2007. Rick Glen Strandlof claimed before his arrest in 2009 in
Colorado to be a wounded Marine veteran who received a Purple
Heart and Silver Star. Such “semper frauds” enrage actual Marines
who take well-earned pride in the corps and its traditions.
We can all agree that false claims of military honors are
repugnant and worthy of social condemnation. These men deserve to
be social pariahs, but there remains a serious question over
whether they deserve to be criminal defendants. We should spend
our time and resources on creating easily accessible resources to
uncover false claims. We also need to remember that, in the end,
true valor cannot be stolen. It can only be earned. What is left
are pathetic pretenders who should not add constitutional injury
to social insult.
Jonathan Turley, the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law
at George Washington University, is a member of USA TODAY’s board
of contributors.
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