WASHINGTON — At least 31 female trainees have been identified as victims in a widening sex scandal targeting a dozen instructors at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, the Air Force revealed Thursday, providing new details in an investigation that has rocked the service’s training command.

Six of the 12 instructors under investigation for misconduct face charges ranging from rape to adultery. A senior Air Force commander said nine of those instructors were in the same squadron, briefing reporters at the Pentagon at the same time that one of the accused appeared in a Lackland courtroom.

Air Force Staff Sgt. Craig LeBlanc, who is charged with aggravated assault and obstruction of justice, allegedly bragged about “getting laid” by a trainee in a supply closet, one of his fellow airmen testified at an evidentiary hearing Thursday.

“I was speechless. I didn’t understand,” said Staff Sgt. Christopher Beck, according to the San Antonio Express-News.

Gen. Edward Rice, commander of the Air Education and Training Command, said the Air Force believes the misconduct is not endemic to the nine training squadrons. He says the sexual misconduct apparently began in 2009 but that the first woman came forward only a year ago.

Those first allegations were levied against Staff Sgt. Luis Walker, who faces the most serious charges and is scheduled to be court-martialed next month. Walker is charged with 28 counts, including rape, aggravated sexual contact and multiple counts of aggravated sexual assault. He has not yet entered a plea.

The majority of the instructors under investigation were in the 331st Training Squadron, whose commander was relived from his post last week. Rice said Lt. Col. Mike Paquette, who has not been accused of misconduct, was relieved because of the “unacceptable level” of misbehavior in his unit.

“In my assessment to this point, it is not an issue of an endemic problem throughout basic military training,” Rice said. “It is more localized, and we are doing a very intensive investigation on that squadron to find out what exactly happened and why.”

Lackland is where every American airman reports for basic training — about 35,000 a year. About one in five are female, pushed through eight weeks of basic training by a flight of instructors that are about 90 percent male.

As the allegations of misconduct mounted, the Air Force in March took the almost unprecedented step of shutting down training for an entire day and interviewing about 5,900 trainees. Rice said Thursday the Air Force received “very little” negative comments about instructors.

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2 Comments

  1. I loved the spin that the Air Force and the AP put on this. 

    Ok let`s explain a few things.  When a supervisor (or instructor in this case) chooses to have an other-than-duly-familiar relationship with a subordinate, it is considered `fraternization`. 

    The Air Force has ruled before that in instances of fraternization, the relationship, on the part of the subordinate is considered non-consenual.  To put it flatly, the Air Force reserves the right to asssume that the supervisor used their position of power to manipulate the subordinate into a romantic relationship.

    What really happened?  A female Air Force recruit, sex-crazed after weeks of forced celibacy starts making googly-eyes at one of their instructors… and there you have it.  Both consensual.  It`s plain wrong, but I can guarantee you that it was consensual.  But because the supervisor chose to have sex with a subordinate, it is now:

    `rape, aggravated sexual contact and multiple counts of aggravated sexual assault.`

    Maybe if there were more people out there getting laid the world would be a happier place…

    I smell that someone threatened to sue the Air Force…

    1. The instructor/trainee relationship in BMT is very different than a supervisor/subordinate relationship elsewhere in the Air Force.

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