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Politics : The American Spirit Vs. The Rightwing

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To: American Spirit who started this subject9/10/2004 12:30:22 PM
From: Doug R   of 1904
 
U.S. to seek custody of accused deserter
At a State Department briefing in Washington, spokesman Richard Boucher said the United States views Jenkins as a deserter charged with "extremely serious offenses."

"We understand Japan plans to bring him there for medical treatment. Once he is there, he falls under Japanese-U.S. status policy. We intend to request custody when we have legal opportunity to do so," Boucher said.

cnn.com

FAILURE TO OBEY AN ORDER ... PENALTY

The Department of the Navy removed two civilian seamen it employed aboard the naval ship Kilauea because they disobeyed an order to be vaccinated against anthrax. On appeal, the MSPB administrative judge found that the Navy had proved by preponderant evidence its charges that Mazares and Testman "willfully and intentionally refused the order of a superior officer." He rejected the appellants' contention that the order was unauthorized, finding that the Navy "had full authority to order the appellants to submit to anthrax vaccination, and immediate vaccination became a requirement of the appellant's CIVMAR position when KILAUEA (assigned to carry ammunition which it supplied to an aircraft carrier operating in the western Pacific Ocean) was ordered to land in Korea, which had been designated a high-threat area." He noted that their "subjective fear of vaccination was not sufficient to excuse their failure to obey a direct order." Thus, the MSPB administrative judge upheld the removals. The MSPB denied the appellants' petition for review.

Mazares and Testman challenged their removals to the Federal Circuit on two grounds. They contended that (1) the order to receive the anthrax vaccine was unauthorized and they therefore could not be punished for disobeying it and (2) the penalty of removal was excessive.

The Federal Circuit reviewed the circumstances in this case and concluded that the military has broad authority and discretion in dealing with its personnel, both military and civilian, including the protection of their health. Further, the Navy did not exceed its authority or otherwise abuse its discretion by ordering Mazares and Testman to undergo anthrax vaccination. The penalty of removal was neither unauthorized nor excessive. The misconduct for which Mazares and Testman were removed was "failure to obey a direct order to receive mandatory injections of an anthrax immunization vaccine." That misconduct constituted insubordination, which the court had defined as a "willful and intentional refusal to obey an authorized order of a superior officer which the officer is entitled to have obeyed," in an earlier decision, Bieber vs. Department of the Army, 287 F.3d 1358 (Fed. Cir. 2002).

opm.gov
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