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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Coast Guard Response to ALJ Jeffie Massey's Claims.




Rear Admiral Mary Landry, the Director of Governmental and Public Affairs, issued a statement "concerning media coverage of Coast Guard Administrative Law Judges."
WASHINGTON – The article “Justice Capsized,” in Sunday’s Baltimore Sun, and Tuesday’s editorial “A listing court” in the same newspaper, emphasize statistics that may leave readers with an erroneous impression that I would like to correct. Pending litigation prevents me from addressing other allegations in the article and editorial.

In an industry with over 200,000 mariners, few violations are serious enough to reach administrative law judges. The Coast Guard only initiates action when failing to do so might endanger the public or the environment.

More than half of over 6,300 charges against mariners since 1999 resulted from a positive drug test, or drug- or alcohol-related convictions. Most remaining charges involve refusal to submit to mandatory drug tests; false or incomplete statements in applications for credentials, mostly involving failure to reveal criminal convictions; and misconduct, mostly involving drug or alcohol use, including operating a vessel while intoxicated.

All of these cases directly affect safety or security. While all mariners are entitled to due process, federal law appropriately allows little discretion for activities in any mode of transportation that may endanger public safety. Nevertheless, the process is remedial, not criminal. The vast majority of mariners charged with drug and alcohol offenses take advantage of rehabilitation programs we have established. As a result, few cases are contested and fully adjudicated by administrative law judges.

More than 2400 of the 6,300 charges were administratively withdrawn, fully admitted, or have not yet been assigned to an administrative law judge. Approximately 2800 charges settled voluntarily prior to assignment to an administrative law judge. The Sun’s reporting incorrectly classified these 5,200 charges, all of which involved little or no administrative law judge involvement, as Coast Guard victories.

Coast Guard administrative law judges are bound to fairly and impartially adjudicate cases. They are no different from counterparts at other agencies. At the heart of the cases they preside over is the safety and welfare of passengers, commerce, and the environment. This public trust must be shared by judges, investigators, and professional mariners.


Chief Administrative Law Judge for the Coast Guard is The Honorable Joseph N. Ingolia.

Chief Administrative Law Judge for the Coast Guard is The Honorable Joseph N. Ingolia; he has been the Chief Administrative Law Judge since 1991. He is a member of the Senior Executive Service. Prior to this appointment with the Coast Guard, he served as an Administrative law Judge for the Federal Maritime Commission for a dozen years.
As Chief Administrative Law Judge for the Coast Guard, which is now a component of the Department of Homeland Security, Judge Ingolia supervises six field judges located throughout the United States and is responsible for oversight of the conduct of formal hearing proceedings conducted by all Administrative Law Judges assigned to the Coast Guard. Their cases relate to the suspension and revocation of licenses, certificates of registry and merchant mariner’s documents and to Class II civil penalties assessed under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act. He also is responsible for the oversight of NOAA cases which by law are tried by Coast Guard ALJs, as well as for certain Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and Department of Commerce (BIS) cases.
He graduated from high school in 1942; by my rough calculations, that would mean Judge Ingolia is in his early 8o's. He must be doing it for the love of the job and service.

And that would explain why he might have said that an administrative judge is "not a judge but rather a tool for the Coast Guard to achieve rulings it wants" (emphasis added) and that administrative judges "should always rule for the Coast Guard."

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Monday, June 25, 2007

DO COAST GUARD JUDGES HAVE JUDICIAL IDEPENDENCE?

ARE COAST GUARD JUDGES NOT FREE TO DECIDE CASES ON THE MERITS?

The chairman of the House subcommittee responsible for oversight of the U.S. Coast Guard intends to convene a special hearing to explore allegations that the Coast Guard's administrative law system is biased against merchant seamen. It has been alleged that Coast Guard judges are forced to rule in favor of the Coast Guard.
Wow! Can you imagine that? The Coast Guard wouldn’t do anything like that, would they? Not the Coast Guard! One would have thought that the Coast Guard wins 98 percent of its cases because its prosecutors are good, and the merchant seamen are so guilty, and the cases brought by the Coast Guard are so airtight. Who would have thought that the Coast Guard would stoop to fix the merchant seamen cases? We thought that they only did that in Court-martials against Coast Guard Academy cadets.

So far, we have only heard allegations that the Coast Guard’s military justice was biased against cadets. The Webster Smith court-martial and the Civil Rights Complaint are both still under appeal; so, we do not know yet whether there is any justice in the Coast Guard’s military justice system. The equivalents of smoking gun evidence and latent DNA evidence have been presented to the Coast Guard appellate court and the Civil Rights officers, but to no avail. The Coast Guard has simply asked for more and more time to try to twist the facts to fit the Official preconceived version of the events.

Things might be different this time. We have inside information. A Coast Guard Administrative Law Judge has given irrefutable evidence of wrongdoing.

However, on the other hand, it would not be very difficult to achieve a conviction rate of 98 percent, or charges found proved rate of 98 percent, if 95 percent of all of your cases were plea bargained. That is exactly what we did in New York when I was the Chief of the Marine Investigation Department at Marine Inspection Office (MIO), Battery Park, New York.
From 1982 to 1986 I was a Coast Guard Law Specialist on a rotational tour out of specialty, as the Senior Investigating Officer (IO), with 10 junior officers as IOs on my staff. The IOs would investigate incidents of alleged misconduct by merchant seamen, and I would review the incident reports. If I thought there was adequate probable cause, I would draft charges against the merchant seaman.
The charges were drafted multiplicious. A single incident would give rise to 10 or more charges and specifications. Before a Hearing in front of the Administrative Law Judge, we would meet with the accused and/or his attorney representative. A merchant seaman facing 10 or more specifications would usually be more than willing to plead guilty to a single specification in order to make all of the other specifications go away. That is what usually happened 9 times out of 10.
With or without attorneys, the seamen were happy to cop a plea in exchange for leniency. The attorneys were veterans. They knew what was happening. They were fully complicit in what was happening.
We had neither the time nor the resources to try all of those cases on the merits in a full blown adversarial hearing.
Moreover, the IOs who prosecuted the cases were not lawyers. They were junior grade officers. None of them had been within a mile of a law school. In an adversarial system, both sides should be equally matched. Or, they should be as close to equally matched as possible. The IOs, with no formal legal training at all, were going up against some of the finest admiralty and trial defense attorneys in New York, that is to say in the entire world. They were out-matched and sometimes out-gunned. In order to hold their own, sometimes they may have needed some coaching, or a lucky break. At the most, some of the judges may have attempted to balance the equities.
The only law or legal procedure that they knew was what I had taught them in a week or two of intense indoctrination. They were good and they were courageous. After having been briefed on the charge or charges, and given the correct legal terminology they faced Judges Frances X J Coughlin and Judge Albert Frevola at the World Trade Center (WTC) court room. They won their cases with a guilty plea and a little help from the judges.
The judges were both retired Coast Guard officers. Judge Albert Frevola retired as a captain after 25 years of active duty and went to work as a Coast Guard judge. He worked as a judge for 30 years and died on the job at his desk in the WTC one Friday afternoon.

Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, D-Md., said he also plans to look into allegations that the system is stacked against merchant mariners, and he plans to speak with Coast Guard Commandant Thad W. Allen. Cummings wants to take immediate action to protect the rights of defendants whose cases are now before the Coast Guard's courts.
Rep. Cummings is chairman of the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation. He said “Even the appearance of injustice or impropriety cannot be tolerated.”
The Coast Guard’s administrative court system handles hundreds of cases each year brought by the Coast Guard against civilian mariners accused of negligence, misconduct or other infractions. Its judges have the authority to suspend or revoke the credentials mariners need to work.
A former Coast Guard Administrative Law Judge Jeffie J. Massey, who left the Coast Guard service in March and 10 days later gave a sworn statement detailing her experience, said she was told by Chief Judge Joseph N. Ingolia that she was not a judge but rather a tool for the Coast Guard to achieve rulings it wants.
“I was specifically told (by Ingolia) that I should always rule for the Coast Guard,” she said in the statement.
According to Judge Massey, Chief Judge Ingolia told other judges how to rule in cases and dictated policy through private memos that were never shared with defendants or their lawyers, a practice that could violate federal laws requiring agency judicial procedures to be published and subject to challenge. And staff attorneys for the chief judge and the Commandant's office discussed cases with Coast Guard investigators, possibly violating the mariners' rights to an impartial hearing. Judge Massey’s accusations have been verified in court records, and internal memos obtained by an independent source.

Judge Massey appeared to have more empathy for the accused than for the victims. She probably was an ACLU kind of judge. She would be satisfied that an accused got off on a technicality and more people died, than for the accused to lose his license for a few months and more people avoid injury or death. Judge Massey’s perspective was different from that of judges and lawyers more familiar with the mission of the US Coast Guard.
In these type of cases the benefit of the doubt must go to the prosecution rather than to the accused, since it is the negligence of the accused that is the basis of the enforcement action.

Resume of ALJ Jeffie Janette Massey
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman, Pat Wood, III appointed Jeffie Janette Massey as an Administrative Law Judge for the Commission on 1 Oct 2001.
Judge Massey had previously served as a judge with the Social Security Administration in San Antonio, Texas. Before that, she was a public defender with the Public Defender's Office of Colorado County in Columbus, Texas, where she represented defendants in the County and District Courts. She also represented juvenile offenders charged with delinquent conduct. Before that Judge Massey was in private practice in Columbus, Texas where she litigated criminal and civil proceedings at the state and federal levels. She also served as Assistant Criminal District Attorney in Canton, Texas. Before that, she held several positions with the U.S. Department Of Energy's Economic Regulatory Administration in Dallas, Texas, including Supervisory Attorney, Deputy Chief Counsel, and Senior Attorney Advisor. Judge Massey received her J.D. and B.A. degrees from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. She is a 1977 graduate of Southern Methodist University with a Juris Doctorate in Law. A member of the Texas BAR Association. She retired in 2007.
Out of more than 6,300 charges brought over the last eight years, mariners prevailed in just 14, according to the agency's records. When dismissals are included, records show the Coast Guard wins or reaches a settlement in more than 97 percent of its cases.
“I practiced law for 20 years and I can't imagine some of this stuff happening,” said Representative Cummings. “I mean, you don't have investigators and judges' staff talking to each other — not if what you're looking for is fairness.
“If these things that are being said are accurate, then anyone in the mariner's position would be hard-pressed to believe that they're going to have their case heard in a fair and impartial manner. And we need to address that.”
Committee Chairman Cummings said he hopes to have Judge Massey testify before members of Congress, and Judge Massey said she would agree to do so if asked.
I am willing to tell the truth about what happened at the Coast Guard with anyone who will listen,” said Massey, reached at her home in Texas. “What they are doing is wrong and people need to know about it.”Representative Cummings said he and U.S. Rep. James L. Oberstar, D-Minn., will decide in the next few days whether to convene a hearing before the Coast Guard subcommittee or the full House Transportation Committee, which Oberstar chairs. He said he hopes to hold the hearing soon after Congress returns from its July 4th recess.

Coast Guard officials have declined to discuss the issue, but the boating safety regulations save lives. These regulations are literally written in blood. Every section of the regulations probably represents someone who has died as the result of someone committing an act prohibited by the regulations. Enforcing these regulations is beneficial to society. It saves lives. Those charged with enforcing the regulations have more empathy for the boating public, and innocent victims than for the accused.
The Coast Guard is charged with enforcement of the nation’s federal boating safety regulations and making sure that licensed merchant mariners are competent to operate safely at sea. It can suspend or revoke mariner licenses. Mariners have the right to be represented and to respond to charges before an administrative law judge. They can appeal an adverse ruling to the Commandant, US Coast Guard and to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

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Wednesday, June 20, 2007

CO of CGC Haley Removed for Fraternization.



Captain of CGC HALEY Removed permanently.


Commander Karl Gabrielsen,the CO of the USCGC Alex Haley, a 282 foot medium endurance law enforcement vessel stationed in Kodiak, Alaska, has been permanently relieved of command following nonjudicial punishment June 13 for conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, and other charges.
Cmdr. Gabrielsen received a punitive letter of reprimand and fines worth up to $5,000 during an NJP (non-judicial punishment) conducted by Pacific Area Commander Vice Admiral Charles Wurster.

Few details have been released concerning the specifics of Commander Gabrielsen’s relationships. It was not revealed whether these relationships were while Commander Gabrielson was acting in an official capacity or while he was in a leave status unrelated to his official duties. Nor has it been stated whether these were social relationships that only amounted to a possible embarrasment to his wife and the officer corps. However, he was relieved of duty April 24 for “loss of confidence.”

An administrative investigation confirmed that Gabrielsen had several “inappropriate relationships” which “compromised his leadership ability,” according to Public Affairs Senior Chief Keith Alholm on June 18. Information obtained so far indicates that none of the relationships were with male or female members of his ship's officers or crew. That would leave the spouses of his officers and crew, and other military personnel (Navy, Army, Marine, Air Force, Alaska State Troopers, National Marine Fisheries and Forest Service members), civilian and Native inhabitants for Cmdr Gabrielson to form relationships with. College students and teenagers from the "Lower 48 Contiguous States" frequently flock to Kodiak to work in the canneries and fish factories. A few cruise ships with lots of lovely passengers frequently put into port there. The age of consent in Alaska is 14.

A 36-year-old Coast Guard officer assigned to Coast Guard Headquarters was arrested Aug. 10 after being caught "in flagrante delicto" in the Stafford, Va., in the bedroom of a 14-year-old girl by her mother.

Lt. Jason Frank, of Gaithersburg, Md., allegedly visited the girl’s home on three different occasions and had sex with her at least twice, according to an Aug. 15 Stafford County Sheriff’s Office announcement.

The girl’s mother allegedly found Frank in her daughter’s bedroom in the early hours of Aug. 1. The mother told deputies that after she told the Coast Guard officer her daughter was only 14, he jumped out the window and fled.

Informed sources said that Lieutenant Frank met the 14 year old girl in an Internet chat room. He was posing as a 28-year-old.

Frank has been charged with two counts of carnal knowledge of a child (statutory rape), taking indecent liberties with a child, soliciting a juvenile with an electronic device, breaking and entering, vandalism, and misdemeanor assault and battery.

Lieutenant Frank is assigned to Coast Guard Headquarters in Washington, D.C., where he works in the Command Center, Coast Guard spokeswoman Natalie Granger said Aug. 20.

He previously served on the Coast Guard buoy tender Sundew, homeported in Duluth, Minn.

He is being held without bond at the Rappahannock Regional Jail in Stafford.


Some officers cannot even wait for the Alaskan maidens to reach 14. -- The Navy's former top ranking officer in Alaska was sentenced to two years in prison for the attempted sexual abuse of a 12-year-old girl.



Commander Robert Schetky, 54 years old, should know discipline and should have been able to control his impulses toward the 12 year old girl, Juneau Superior Judge Larry Weeks said on 21 June2007 as he handed down the sentence, which includes two more years that were suspended.

"No one will ever know the damage done to her," Judge Weeks said. Prosecutors said Schetky touched the girl's breasts multiple times last year.

He was arrested and pleaded guilty in January. As part of the plea deal, he spent time at a treatment facility in Arizona that specializes in substance and sexual addictions.

Following his release from prison, Schetky will be required to register as a sex offender for 15 years. He is prohibited from contact with his victim without prior approval and from contact with girls under 17 and must submit a DNA sample.

Before his arrest, Schetky was the Navy's liaison to the Coast Guard as head of the U.S. Pacific Fleet Maritime Homeland Defense Detachment. It was not clear from the evidence whether his close association with some Coast Guard officers led to the decline in his moral character. Bad company corrupts good morals.

Schetky, who is still on active duty, could face military punishment including the loss of retirement benefits, said Shane Tuck, a spokesman for the U.S. Pacific Fleet.


These cases brings to mind the bizarre love triangle between the male and female Naval astronauts and the Air Force captain at Orlando, Florida back in February 2007. Captain Lisa Nowak, a 43-year-old Navy captain (0-6)who flew last summer on the space shuttle Discovery, was arrested February 5, 2007 on suspicion of attempted kidnapping, and attempted burglary on a vehicle and assault.
Captain Nowak was arrested on charges that she tried to kidnap and kill Air Force Captain Colleen Shipman, her rival, for the affections of Navy Commander William Oefelein.
Captain Lisa Nowak was fired from NASA on 7 March, a month after she had been booked. Commander Oefelein was also later dismissed from the Space Program. They are both at Naval Station Norfolk, Va awaiting final disposition of the charges against them.
Whether they get Non-judicial punishment at an Admiral's mast, suspension of a token fined, or a Punitive Letter of Reprimand, the punishment for these senior officers rarely fits the crime.
This again brings to mind the cases of the deaths of Lt. Jessica Hill and BM2 Steve Dudue and the three senior officers who literally got away with murder. Was Vice Admiral Charles Wurster, Pacific Area Commander correct when he said that the three senior officers assigned to the Coast Guard icebreaker CGC Healy during the fatal diving incident in the Arctic last year that resulted in the deaths of Lt. Jessica Hill and BM2 Steve Duque deserved nonjudicial punishment rather than facing criminal charges at a court-martial?
Admiral Wurster said that he took action to hold CGC HEALY's Commanding Officer, Executive Officer and Operations Officer accountable for failing to meet their personal responsibilities surrounding that mishap. He held a mast for the CO, XO, and the Ops Officer from the CGC Healy on January 14, the day before the Coast Guard released the Final Report of an investigation into the death of Lt. Hill, 31, and Boatswain’s Mate 2nd Class Duque. He found the three — the commanding, executive and operations officers — guilty of dereliction of duty.

Captain of CGC Healey also Removed permanently.

The Coast Guard seems to be having problems with the officers of the HALEY and the HEALY when they are operating in frigid waters. Officers' brains seem to freeze over in Arctic environs. The same Vice Admiral Charles Wurster arrived at the same conclusion each time. That is that NJP is always an appropriate punishment.Captain Doug Russell, the CO, was relieved of command shortly after the accident. On January 14, his sentence was to receive a punitive letter of reprimand and a fine equal to one month’s pay.Commander Jeffrey Jackson, the XO, was sentenced to receive a punitive letter of admonition. The Operations Officer Lt. Cmmander. James Dalitsch was sentenced to receive a punitive letter of reprimand and a fine.All fines were suspended. The Admiral went through the motions, then he nullified it all. It was bad enough that he chose the lowest criminal forum available to punish these officers for their parts in the deaths of Lt. Hill and BM2 Duque, but he had the bad judgement to take back the token punishment.
“I believe that NJP was adequate,” Wurster said. “They took full responsibility.” This Admiral's Mast conducted behind closed doors the day before a report of the facts was released to the public is an outrage.
Cadets and junior officers are subjected to one standard of justice; and, senior officers and celebrities are subjected to another.

The Coast Guard seems to have lost complete faith in its Law Specialists. They are hardly ever used for military justice any more. The Line officers and the Operations officers do not trust them to bring home the bacon, so to speak. When senior officers want to punish someone, they do not want to waste time on ceremony, criminal rights, and due process. Moreover, they do not trust the fate of commissioned officers to jury panels that might contain former enlisted men as members. It is safer to just hold a captain's mast (NJP) and be done with the whole thing. Also, with budget cuts and fewer Law Specialists, a court-martial can be a very expensive and time-consuming enterprise.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Peter Pace has a difference of opinion from senior Coast Guard leadership. The Department of Defense interprets the Uniform Code of Military Justice more strictly than does their cousins in the Department of Homeland Security. And, they appear to apply it more uniformly up and down the chain of command.
General Peter Pace, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a native of New York City, and a 1967 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, said in an interview that his views on homosexuals in the military and the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" Policy are based on his upbringing.
"As an individual, I would not want (acceptance of homosexual behavior) to be our policy, just like I would not want it to be our policy that if we were to find out that so-and-so was sleeping with somebody else's wife, that we would just look the other way, which we do not. We prosecute that kind of immoral behavior," he said, according to the audio and a transcript released by his staff.


Kodiak is an island fortress with many other military components. Also, foreign fishing vessels have been temporarily docked there pending punitive actions by the US Attorney in Anchorage, Alaska. It has not been confirmed if the possibility of "pillow talk" has compromised any law enforcement or national security operations.

Further out the Aleutian Island chain, the Coast Guard maintains a joint military presence on Attu Island with the US Air Force. It is a big ear pointed towards the Kamchatka Peninsula between the Bering Sea and the Gulf of Okhotsk. Attu Island is the westernmost and largest island in the Near Islands group of the Aleutian Islands of Alaska.

The 282-foot Alex Haley was Gabrielsen’s third command. A 1986 Coast Guard Academy graduate and alumnus of the Naval War College, Gabrielsen was formerly the CO of St. Paul Island, Alaska, LORAN Station, He later commanded the 110-foot CGC Nunivak.

Commander Gabrielsen is married and has two children.

The results of the NJP likely signal the end of Gabrielsen’s career.
“For a commissioned officer, the punitive letters have significant career impacts and trigger other administrative processes,” Alholm said.

CGC Alex Haley,homeported in Kodiak, Alaska, has been under the command of the XO, executive officer, Cmdr. Kelly Hatfield, since April 30. Cmdr. Kevin Jones will assume command of the vessel June 22 during a change-of-command ceremony in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Coast Guard Cutters are classed according to the length of the ship's hull, and while the hull of the Alex Haley is 283 feet, she is nonetheless classed as a medium endurance cutter (WMEC-210'). The cutter's primary mission is fisheries enforcement in the Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska and North Pacific.




ALEXANDER PALMER HALEY

To memorialize his contributions to the Coast Guard and to the nation, the Coast Guard named a medium-endurance cutter after its first chief journalist, Alex Haley, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Roots. The Coast Guard commissioned the Coast Guard cutter ALEX HALEY on Saturday, July 10th, 1999 at the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore.

The Coast Guard cutter Alex Haley is based in Kodiak, Alaska, where it conducts the Coast Guard missions of search and rescue and fisheries law enforcement in the Gulf of Alaska, the Bering Sea and the North Pacific. The Alex Haley is the first military vessel named for a journalist. Haley, died in 1992, and had a long and distinguished career as both a journalist and a novelist, and began writing as a hobby while assigned as a steward aboard various cutters during World War II. As word spread of his talent, the Coast Guard assigned Haley to its New York public affairs office where he served as the Coast Guard's first chief journalist, penning stories about Coast Guard rescues and developing his trademark writing style.

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