SAN DIEGO
(AP) -- Former Air Force officer Michael Almy's five-year battle to get back
into the military after being discharged for being gay is still far from over
despite the end of the policy that halted the decorated war veteran's 13-year
career and left him curled up on his bathroom floor, crying.
The repeal
of "don't ask, don't tell" coincides with the most competitive time
in recent history to get into the military because of the sluggish economy, and
the Defense Department says it has no plans to give priority to those
discharged for being gay, even if they still meet the military's age limits,
fitness standards and cutoffs for time out of service.
Many, like
Almy, a 41-year-old former Air Force major, see the only way back to
active-duty as being through the courts.
He and two
other discharged officers - one from the Air Force officer and one from the
Navy - are suing the Justice Department to demand they be reinstated, and they
hope a federal appeals court will help their efforts by upholding a lower court
ruling last year that declared the law unconstitutional.
Activists
believe if the ruling stands it could open the legal doors for a class-action
suit or settlement for many of the nearly 14,000 military members discharged
under the nearly 18-year-old policy that prohibited the military from asking
about the sexual orientation of service members but required discharge of those
who acknowledged being gay or were discovered to be engaging in homosexual
activity.
"The
sad truth is repeal really does nothing for people thrown out of the
military," Almy said. "There is no restitution, no reparations, no
special personnel process to help those to get back in the military who were
thrown out."
Almy said
he never admitted to the military he was gay, but was discharged under the
policy in 2006 after a service member snooped through his emails on a
government-issued computer in Iraq when Almy's deployment there ended.
Almy
testified for the Log Cabin Republicans at a trial last year. U.S. District
Judge Virginia Phillips temporarily halted the policy after the trial,
declaring the law violated the constitutional free speech and due process
rights of gay military members.
Shortly
before being honorably discharged, Almy was recognized as one of the top officers
in the Air Force for his leadership skills in running an exemplary unit that
helped maintain control over the vast majority of Iraq's air space during the
war.
Even after
his discharge, his wing commander formally recommended to the Air Force promotion
board that he be promoted to lieutenant colonel, ahead of his peers, because of
his outstanding performance, according to his testimony under oath.
Almy
estimates his discharge cost him $1.5 million in retirement benefits, the
amount he says he would have received if he had been allowed to complete his 20
years in the service.
Dan Woods,
an attorney for the Log Cabin Republicans, said if the lower court ruling is
upheld by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals it could bolster the cases of
thousands of former service members, like Almy, who "are still suffering
the collateral consequences of being discharged under this unconstitutional
law."
"A lot
of people lost opportunities for promotion, a lot people might want to re-apply
but can't because now they're too old," Woods said. "Those people
ought to have the right to use our case to try to get their discharged status
changed, or to try to get reinstated, or try to get back pay."
Woods said
the Obama administration wants his case dismissed because it does not want
"to deal with some 14,000 people making claims for back pay and
reinstatement. That's really what it's about."
Justice
Department officials declined to comment. DOJ attorneys have argued in their
court filings that the lower court made its decision before the repeal process
began and that repeal of a statute invalidates such constitutional challenges.
The 9th
Circuit will hear arguments from both sides Sept. 1 at a hearing in Pasadena,
Calif.
The law is
scheduled to be abolished Sept. 20. But if the policy's fallout is still having
an impact on people's lives then the court could still rule on the
constitutionality of the case, said Erwin Chemerinsky, University of California,
Irvine's law school dean.
For Almy,
the victory of repealing the policy has been bittersweet as he celebrates for
today's gay service members while struggling to get back the life he feels was
stolen from him. "To get back on active duty is really next to impossible
without the lawsuit," he said.
The Defense
Department has said that the negative re-entry codes on the discharge paperwork
of those kicked out under the policy will be waived, and that applicants with
honorable discharges will be treated like other prior service applicants and
accepted based on need. But that need is dwindling.
Traditionally,
the military services bring in prior-service recruits for certain specialties,
but even those positions are far fewer today, said Defense Department
spokeswoman Eileen Lainez. The percentage of prior-service members among the
active-duty recruits has dropped from 5 percent to 3 percent.
All
military branches are at full capacity as people flock to the military for jobs
or choose to stay in longer. With budget tightening and the expectation the
Afghanistan war is winding down, the branches plan to trim their numbers.
The Army is
looking to cut 22,000 starting in October after getting a temporary surge in
troops in 2009, while the Marine Corps plans to slim down from 202,000 down to
186,000 in the next few years.
The Navy
will cut 3,000 officers in the next few months because the promotion lines are
so clogged "there is no place for anybody to go," Navy Adm. Gary
Roughead, the chief of naval operations, told The Associated Press. The Air
Force at the same time is going to start letting go several hundred of its
9,000 officers.
Jenny L.
Kopfstein said she applied in March to be a Navy attorney but was turned down.
The former
decorated Navy officer from San Diego, who has testified three times about her
2002 discharge, said she doesn't know if she was rejected because "don't
ask, don't tell" is still in place or because there were no positions
available for her.
She's going
to try again in the fall but time is running short for the 36-year-old to meet
the military's age limits. If she doesn't get in, Kopfstein said she might
become a civilian lawyer who works with the military or another kind of
government attorney.
Almy said
he is not ready to let go of his dream.
"This
is what I had dedicated all my life to doing," said Almy, who followed in
the footsteps of his father and uncles, all former Air Force officers.
"That's where my heart is. That's what my passion is - to be an officer, a
leader in the Air Force. I miss the missions, the camaraderie, the esprit de
corps."
"I
never had a desire to do anything else when I was growing up, and I still don't
to this day," he said.
| Gay Pride 2011 - "Dutch Military Boat" (Photo: RNW) |
About the Challenges of Being a Gay Man – Oct 23, 2010 (Saint Germain channelled by Alexandra Mahlimay and Dan Bennack) - “You see, your Soul and Creator are not concerned with any perspective you have that contradicts the reality of your Divinity – whether this be your gender, your sexual preference, your nationality – or your race, ethnicity, religious beliefs, or anything else.”
"The Akashic System" – Jul 17, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Religion, God, Benevolent Design, DNA, Akashic Circle, (Old) Souls, Gaia, Indigenous People, Talents, Reincarnation, Genders, Gender Switches, In “between” Gender Change, Gender Confusion, Shift of Human Consciousness, Global Unity,..... etc.) New !
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