New York Civil Liberties Union Wins Federal Court Victory for Conscientious Objector (3/20/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NEW YORK, NY - The New York Civil Liberties Union announced today that a
federal district court has ordered the U.S. Army not to deploy a soldier to
Afghanistan who has a pending application for Conscientious Objector (C.O.)
status.
"Today's court order ensures that Corey Martin's right to fair and
constitutional treatment of his Conscientious Objector application will be
protected," said NYCLU Cooperating Attorney Deborah H. Karpatkin. "The court
will continue to protect him from retaliation and punishment as the Army
processes his C.O. application."
Sergeant Corey D. Martin is currently stationed at Fort Drum, New York. He
applied for discharge from the Army as a Conscientious Objector in December 2005
after realizing that he is ethically opposed to war. The Army granted
first-level approval to Martin's application for C.O. status, but in the
meantime, with two more levels of approval still pending, it informed Sergeant
Martin that he would be deployed to Afghanistan on March 14, 2006.
The Army had previously decided not to deploy Sgt. Martin, after his C.O.
application was granted first-level approval, but then reversed the decision and
ordered that he be deployed on March 14 for retaliatory and punitive reasons.
That deployment date was postponed when Judge David N. Hurd issued a Temporary
Restraining Order on March 10, 2006, in response to a NYCLU lawsuit on Sgt.
Martin's behalf. Today the same judge signed an order in which the Army agreed
not to deploy Sgt. Martin to Afghanistan at any time before his Conscientious
Objector application is fully processed, and any district court review of that
process is completed.
"The Army has now agreed not to deploy Corey Martin to a zone of military
conflict, which would be punitive and in conflict with his Conscientious
Objector beliefs," said NYCLU Cooperating Attorney Samuel C. Young.
The Army has also agreed to process Martin's C.O. application in a timely
fashion. The District Court will stay involved in the case as needed, through
the Army's C.O. process and afterwards.
Martin joined the Army in 2001, received excellent performance evaluations as
a soldier, and was promoted to Sergeant. But beginning in the winter of 2002 he
began to have personal doubts about war, and he undertook a personal study of
texts on war and peace. By the fall of 2005, Sergeant Martin realized that he
opposed all war morally and ethically and that he could no longer participate
as a soldier in the U.S. Army.
The Army Investigating Officer, who reviewed Sgt. Martin's C.O. application
in the first round of the three step process, recommended that the application
be approved. He determined that Martin "is sincere in his beliefs of
conscientious objection ... with the underlying belief as his opposition to all
wars and the unintentional consequence which war produces, which is casualties
and suffering it produces to innocent civilians." The officer concluded that
"SGT Martin's chain of command believe that SGT Martin would struggle ... with
his beliefs about war and the harming of innocents, jeopardize the mission
and put themselves and their soldiers in danger."
"We are gratified that the Court has signed an order that requires the
military to follow the law," said Donna Lieberman, Executive Director of the
NYCLU.
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