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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Jason Frank, and Other Sexual Predators.

File photo of Ensign Jason Frank in rabbit fur cap.

Jason Frank is the Coast Guard's Midnight Creeper. He's a Midnight Creeper and an all day sleeper; a midnight mover and an all night groover.
The 36-year-old Coast Guard officer is assigned to the Command Center Coast Guard Headquarters, Washington DC. He 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 the Command Center 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,Va according to Patricia Kime, of Navy Times.

He is a midnight creeper
And an all day sleeper.
He's a midnight rover.
He wanted to look the girl over.
Well he came through her window
And saw her mother there.
He told her he was the midnight creeper.
And she too had better beware.
The 14 year old child could go back to sleeping.
She would have only sweet dreams in her head.
The mother was not half bad either.
Before he left he'd make sure she too was well fed.

Lt Jason Frank's duties at Coast Guard Headquarters Command Center included, among other things: Serving as the primary notification management body for Coast Guard Headquarters, the Command Center is the functional heart of information flow. Operating 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, there is round-the-clock activity. Responsibilities include but are not limited to:
-Monitor Coast Guard Operations World-Wide
-Brief Commandant and Senior Flags
-Notify HQ Programs of significant events
-Act as intermediary to other federal and state agencies
-Conduct Sensitive Operations
-Prepare all Flag briefing material
-Case File Management
-Review HQ Record Message Traffic
-Record news on CNN, ABC, NBC, and CBS
-Recording of all incoming and outgoing calls through the Command Center VOIP Phone System
-Maintain Teleconference System
-Maintain Secure and Non-Secure Video Teleconference (VTC) Systems
-Work with the Department of Homeland Security, State Department and other National Security Council (NSC) members The HQ Command Center Watch is comprised of a Command Duty Officer (CDO), Duty Officers (DO), Chief Petty Officer of the Watch (CPOW), and additional Intel and Common Operating Picture (COP) watchstanders.
(I wonder if he briefed his Superior Officers on the news reports concerning his episodes of "midnight creeping" and all night rambling?)

This year as students return to school in Virginia, there's something new in their curriculum. Virginia is the first state to require public schools to teach Internet safety.
The mandate is in response to concerns about sex offenders and other adults preying on young people they've met through social-networking Web sites such as MySpace. It's one of several steps states are taking to try to protect children and teenagers online.
George Washington High School in Danville, Va., is one of the largest schools in southern Virginia. But there's one thing almost all of its 1,800 students have in common — MySpace pages.
Gene Fishel, an assistant Virginia attorney general, gave a lesson about Internet safety — especially on social-networking sites such as MySpace, Facebook, and Xanga that teenagers often use to communicate, and criminals sometimes use to prowl for victims.
Fishel tells teenagers to follow the same rules online they would in any public place: Don't talk to strangers, don't share personal information, and don't agree to meet people who approach you on the Web. It's a message all Virginia students will hear this year, now that the state has become the first to require Internet safety lessons in school.
Attorney General Bob McDonnell is sending his staff to classrooms across Virginia to warn about online dangers.
"Young kids don't see how they could possibly get hurt at a computer in their own home," McDonnell says. "Parents don't know enough about the Internet to have the conversations they need to have with their kids. And so that's why we're doing this. The key now is education."

At MySpace, the most popular of the sites, chief security officer Hemanshu Nigam says online consent forms would do little to deter predators and could easily be faked.
"The requirement to check against some database that a parent is in fact a parent, that is not something that can be technically implemented because you can never tell who's a parent just by being online," Nigam says.
MySpace says it is pursuing security measures it considers more effective. It's removed thousands of sex offenders from the site, strengthened privacy options and is working on software that allows parents to monitor some of the things their children do online. Nigam says education — not new laws — is the best way to protect young users.
"When you're sitting at a computer, you are not going to see a hand crashing through your monitor that grabs your child and takes him into this nether land of danger," Nigam says. "The real issue is has your teen been educated to make the right decisions online."

Navy Command Master Chief Edward Scott, the former command master chief of Naval Base Kitsap, Washington, was not given an honorable discharge after being convicted of Internet-predator charges in July, as a local newspaper reported, according to Navy sources. Instead, he was given an other-than-honorable discharge.
The Kitsap Sun reported Feb. 16 that former Command Master Chief Edward E. Scott, who was convicted of attempted rape of a child and having immoral communications with a minor and sentenced to nine months in jail, was given an honorable discharge and permitted to retire as an E-8. But Navy sources, speaking anonymously because of privacy laws, report that Scott's discharge as a senior chief information systems technician was not only "other-than-honorable," but he also received an RE-4 re-enlistment code, barring him from ever returning to duty.

Federal privacy regulations protect the details of every service member's discharge. In its story reporting that Scott received an honorable discharge, the Kitsap Sun cited "a report confirming Scott's status that has circulated through the criminal justice system."
Still, that other-than-honorable discharge does give Scott, who served 25 years on active duty, his military retirement pay as well other retiree benefits. The nature of that discharge also qualifies him for benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs.
VA officials confirmed that for Scott to be stripped of those benefits, his discharge would have had to be "dishonorable or for bad conduct."
Because he is a registered "Level II" sex offender in the state of Washington, Scott does not have unrestricted base access. Per an order from Secretary of the Navy Donald Winter, he is allowed to visit only certain locations on base such as a medical clinic or the commissary, but only if he gives the base advance notice of his visit.
A Kitsap Sun editor, David Nelson, said the newspaper had been in touch with the Navy about Scott's case and that it planned a story explaining the discrepancy between the earlier documents it had reported on and the new information about Scott's discharge.
Scott's story has been widely circulated on military-themed online bulletin boards, where posters have complained that, given his offense, he shouldn't have been given an honorable discharge from the Navy.
"He should lose all pay and benefits and be booted out of the Navy at the lowest possible paygrade," wrote retired Master Chief Aircraft Maintenanceman Emmitt E. Hampton in a letter to Navy Times. "He has disgraced every chief petty officer, past and present."
Scott was found guilty of rendezvousing with detectives in a hotel room for what he thought would be sex with a Navy mother and her two children. He arranged the encounter on an Internet chat-room with investigators posing as the mother.

AND THE BEAT GOES ON..

Petty Officer 1st Class Wilson Medina has been charged with sexual assault of a recruit at the Coast Guard Training Center, Cape May, New Jersey. Coast Guard public information sources did not reveal whether the victimized recruit was male or female.

Following the massive amount of personal information revealed by the Coast Guard Academy in the buildup to the Cadet Webster Smith court-martial, other Coast Guard units have become more discrete in the type and amount of information that is being released to the public in sexual assault cases.

Petty Officer Medina is a company commander at the Coast Guard Training Center at Cape May, New Jersey.

Petty Officer Medina has been reassigned to new duties at the Coast Guard’s only boot camp. The 36-year-old is charged with forcible sodomy and abusive sexual contact.

Officials say the allegation stems from an incident in Medina’s Coast Guard housing unit in November 2007.

Medina and the recruit were off duty.

Authorities said they launched an investigation after the recruit reported the incident in December. That would appear to have been within 30 days of the alleged sexual assault.

The recruit’s gender and name have not been released.

AND THE BEAT GOES on..AND THE BEAT GOES on..

A Navy sailor was sentenced Wednesday to a lengthy prison term for a case involving the possession of child pornography.

Joseph D. Castellano, 25, originally from Georgia, was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison after pleading guilty in U.S. District Court to downloading child pornography to his laptop at Oceana Naval Air Station.

The FBI discovered Castellano had downloaded child pornography images using the online peer-to-peer file-sharing program Limewire in early 2007, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney's Office.

When federal agents searched his computer, they discovered 900 still images and 11 videos of child pornography, the statement said.

Castellano was a petty officer third class in the Navy when he left the service last year after serving six years. His attorney said he earned a good conduct medal while stationed at sea during the war in Iraq .

Also on 13 March 2008, Elmer E. Eychaner III, 36, of Virginia Beach, was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison after he was caught paying a $79.99 subscription fee to view child porn online, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

Eychaner, a convicted sex offender, was arrested last year and pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography on his home computer.

He last was employed at a Beach self-storage facility.


DRUMS KEEP POUNDING RYTHUM TO THE BRAIN, AND THE BEAT GOES ON..

The United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland announced Friday, 7 March 2008, that two upper-class midshipmen have been referred to an Article 32 Investigation on charges including child pornography and rape:

* Midshipman 1st Class Michael Pollard, a senior, faces charges of attempting to distribute child pornography, obstruction of justice, possessing pornography in Bancroft Hall, making a false official statement and obstructing justice, and receiving and possessing child pornography, said Naval Academy spokeswoman Jennifer Erickson. The alleged incidents occurred between July 2003 and August 2007, according to an Annapolis statement.

* Midshipman 2nd Class Mark Calvanico, a junior, faces charges of rape, unauthorized absence, unlawful breaking and entering into a dwelling with intent to commit rape, and conduct unbecoming an officer. The alleged incidents happened Oct. 14, 2007 according to an Annapolis Academy statement.

Midshipman Pollard’s hearing is scheduled for March 24, and Midshipman Calvanico’s is March 28. Both Article 32 Investigations will be conducted at the Washington Navy Yard, in Southeast Washington,DC, near Fort McNair. This was the same location where
First Class Midshipman Lamar Owens, the former star quarterback at Annapolis,was charged last year with - and later acquitted of - raping a fellow midshipman in her barracks room. While not convicted of the rape, Owens was convicted of two lesser counts: conduct unbecoming an officer (for having sex in the dorm) and disobeying a lawful order (for having contact with the accuser). However, the jury recommended that Owens receive no punishment.

BOYS KEEP CHASING GILRS TO GET A KISS, and the beat goes on.....
NAVY DOCTORS VIDEOTAPE THEIR BLISS, and the beat goes on..


In November 2007, a jury of six Navy captains sentenced CDR Kevin Ronan a 46-month term in the Navy brig and ordered his dismissal from the military. He had been convicted of conduct unbecoming an officer, illegal wiretapping and obstruction of justice. He began serving his sentence shortly afterward.

Navy prosecutors had asked for the 46-month sentence because it was equal to the time a midshipman spends at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.
But Vice Adm. Adam M. Robinson, the Navy’s surgeon general, has decided to reduce the sentence.

“The surgeon general said that he believed 24 months was adequate, so he directed that the remainder of that 46 months be suspended,” said a spokesman. “What that means is if Commander Ronan is a model prisoner, then once he reaches that two-year mark, the suspension [of the sentence] will go into effect.”

Vice Admiral Robinson weighed the benefit of keeping CDR Ronan confined for the full sentence, the expense of confinement and a belief that Ronan had been sent a significant message about his actions.

CDR Ronan denied making the recordings during testimony at his trial, but acknowledged he bought an air purifier with a hidden camera. Ronan’s defense was that the tapes were made by midshipmen in an effort to extort money from him.

Before he was sentenced, Ronan expressed regret but did not take responsibility for the tapes. “A crime occurred in my house with equipment I knowingly provided and I take responsibility for that,” he said.

Navy prosecutors alleged Ronan used the camera to tape the male midshipmen having sex with girlfriends or masturbating while they stayed in guest bedrooms at his Annapolis home. The midshipmen were there as part of an academy program that places students in private homes during their free time.

Ronan testified that he bought the device to make sure the students didn’t throw parties while he wasn’t home. He said he tested it once, but later used it only to clean the air in the spare bedrooms, not for taping.

Ronan allegedly began using the camera for taping as early as May 2006. Two men, one a midshipman, the other a former student, found the recordings and turned them over to authorities.
Before he was assigned to the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, CDR Ronan ran the Naval Academy’s student health clinic for four years until 2006. He was also a doctor for several Navy sports teams.

He hosted about a dozen students at his house, mostly as part of the Naval Academy’s sponsorship program.

MUSIC IS A UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE, ALLOWING ALL TO SING AND CLAP THEIR HANDS,
SEX IS ALSO UNIVERSAL, NEW YORK GOVERNORS CAN JOIN THE BAND...
and the Beat goes on..



Eliot Spitzer was once known as "Mr Clean," anointed by Time magazine as "Crusader of the Year," and talked of as potential presidential material.



Eliot Spitzer, who resigned as New York governor 14 March, is perhaps more likely to be remembered as "Client 9," his pseudonym in a federal criminal complaint detailing the take-down of a high-end prostitution ring.

Born in the Bronx, one of New York's toughest neighborhoods, in 1959, Spitzer first attended Princeton, one of the most prestigious US universities, before studying law at another Ivy League institution — Harvard.

Shortly after graduating, he went on to work at the Manhattan district attorney's office, where he cut his teeth tackling the Gambino Mafia family's hold on the city, before going into private practice.


The salacious details of New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's hypocritical, extramarital love life have captivated the media all week of 9-14 March. Had New York's chief executive picked a different day to get caught with his pants down and quit his job, some other prominent resignations might have received more coverage. Apparently, there just aren't enough journalists to stake out the Spitzer's Manhattan apartment, track down his $1 Thousand an hour hooker and cover some other premature exits.




Ashley Alexandra Dupré, the $1000-an-hour prostitute also known as 'Kristen', is the woman at the heart of the Eliot Spitzer scandal. Here’s the fantasy that the prostitution ring, the Emperor’s Club V.I.P., was selling Governor Spitzer about a young woman it called Kristen, who calls herself Ashley Alexandra Dupré: that she was a successful swimsuit model who’d traveled the world (as opposed to a singer getting nowhere with a boyfriend who’d paid her rent); that she enjoyed civilized pursuits like dining at exclusive restaurants (actually, she’s been hoping for work at a friend’s restaurant); and that she liked sampling fine wines (no mention of the drug abuse she’d reported on her MySpace page). The site also described her as 24 (in fact, she’s 22, an age that might have sounded dangerously collegiate to an affluent clientele).
Manhattan federal prosecutors have given Ashley Alexandra Dupré immunity to testify in the investigation of a worldwide prostitution ring.

Tales of the tainted governor took up so much ink and airtime that the potentates of the press didn't even notice the sex scandal that claimed the career of another powerful hypocrite: Tehran's brutal police chief, General Reza Zarei. The general, a favorite of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has been responsible for "moral enforcement" of Sharia law, including "dress codes" that require women to be covered from head to toe. The chief "stepped down" after he was caught nude in a Tehran brothel with six naked prostitutes.

High sounding rhetoric appears to go hand in hand with low morals.

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Monday, August 20, 2007

The EAGLE has landed.





CGC Eagle, Coast Guard Academy training ship returns from 4 month cruise to the Caribbean. Officer candidates, cadets and the Eagle's crew sailed to Barbados, St. Martin, Colombia, Mexico and Puerto Rico, making their last stop at Norfolk, Va., four days ago before returning to New London.
"The ship's primary mission is to train those cadets and officer candidates, but the vessel also has a public relations mission", said Captain Chris Sinnett, the Commanding Officer . The Eagle's stops in the Caribbean were chosen because they have U.S. embassies or a strong Coast Guard presence.
The Coast Guard estimates the vessel hosted more than 40,000 visitors over the last 112 days. The cadets and crew took part in several community service projects along the way, helping to repaint a baseball stadium in Colombia, volunteering at an animal shelter in Barbados and making repairs to an orphanage in St. Martin.

A male crewmember and a female cadet were sent home to be with their families after an alleged assault while on liberty during a port call in Veracruz, Mexico, in mid-July. According to the crewmember and the cadet, two Mexican policemen surprised them after a swim at a local beach, attempted to handcuff them, stole some of their possessions, threatened them and forced the female to perform oral sex on one of them, a Mexican prosecutor told The Associated Press.

The police officers have been charged with robbery, abuse of authority and sexual misconduct.

When asked about the female cadet and the crewman that he left behind in Veracruz, Mexico, Captain Sinnet had no comment.
(The Day. 18 Aug 2007)

THIS JUST IN: Captain Chris Sinnett can probably be forgiven for leaving the female cadet and the enlisted man behind in Veracruz. He had other things on his mind. There were some very nasty and mean-spirited things going on below decks on the Eagle. For example, an African American cadet awoke one morning to find a hangman’s noose had been left in his bag. Was this just a practical joke, or was this evidence of infiltration of the cadet corps and the ship’s crew from certain sick elements in our society? Could this possibly be more fallout from the Webster Smith court-martial? Well placed sources confirm that there has been no official investigation and no suspects have been named.
ALEXANDRIA, La., Aug 15, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Grace Chung Becker, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, and Donald W. Washington, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana, today announced that Jeremiah Munsen, 19, of Pineville, La., was sentenced to four months in prison for his role in using nooses to threaten marchers who participated in the "Jena Six" civil rights rally. In addition to the four-month prison term, Munsen received one year of supervised release and 125 hours of community service.
On Sept. 20, 2007, in an incident that garnered national media attention, Munsen and another person allegedly attached the nooses to the back of a pickup truck and repeatedly drove slowly and menacingly past a large group of African American individuals who had gathered at a bus depot in Alexandria, La., after attending the civil rights rally in Jena.
The defendant pleaded guilty April 25, 2008, admitting that he displayed two large, life-sized nooses from the back of his pickup truck with the intent to frighten and intimidate the demonstrators.
This gives an indication of the environment and the atmosphere at the Academy that gave rise to the things that happened to Webster Smith. The Academy is pretty much a closed society. Attitudes and actions start at the top of the chain of command and run down hill. The senior officers set the tone, and the lower ranking officers and cadets take their clues from them. The senior officers gave the impression that they wanted to scape-goat African American cadets to make political points with Congressman Shays and the Militant women's organizations to show how they were protecting the young white female cadets.
What they did to Webster Smith signaled to the cadets that they could engage in some subtle racially intimidating behavior. Also, if they were caught the punishment would be lax or little at all. They started to roll a snowball down a mountain, and now it is picking up momentum. They unleashed a whirl wind. Who knows where it will end? One thing is sure, Van Sice and Wisniewski opened up a Pandora's Box.
This did not happen over night. It has been brewing. What happened to Webster Smith was not an abberation. It was in keeping with the decisions and signals from the Superintendent and the Commandant of Cadets.
The correct decision in the Formal Complaint of Racial Discrimination could put the brakes on this trend, and might even stop it all together. It would show some of the lesser bigots that their pranks or intimidating acts will not be tolerated by the larger society outside of the Academy grounds.
The Rule of Law still prevails in this country. Most people would do the right thing for the right reason, if they were allowed to do so.
On the September 25 the AP reported that Congressman Elijah E. Cummings has called for a thorough military investigation in the Noose Incidents at the Coast Guard Academy.
Rep. Cummings, a Maryland Democrat and chairman of the House Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, urged Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen to address the full academy and asked for a more intensive probe.
"Racial discrimination and intolerance have no place in either the Academy or the Coast Guard, and these incidents run directly against the efforts being made to increase diversity throughout the Coast Guard," Cummings said in a statement.
"I have asked Admiral Allen not only to conduct a thorough investigation into the incidents, but also to address the entire academy to convey that such behavior will not be tolerated in the service," he said.
Cummings praised the efforts of the academy to expand training in race relations but said that was not enough.
The first noose was left in a Black cadet's bag July 15 on board the Coast Guard cutter Eagle. The second was found in early August on the office floor of a female officer who had been conducting the race relations training in response to the first incident.
Academy Superintendent Burhoe was outraged that the incident happened to a cadet in that training environment. The campus has launched a full investigation and race relations training for the next group of cadets headed to The Eagle.
The investigation came up empty and the white instructor of the race relations classes found a second noose on the floor of her office.
"I would expect the public to hold us to a higher standard" Burhoe said.
Burhoe is continuing the search for the culprits and remains proud of the overall academy and its adherence to the Coast Guard's core values of honor, devotion of duty and respect.
"We really can't let the few bring the majority who are doing exactly what they should be doing when they're doing it down," Burhoe said.

I shutter to think that this may have become the preferred means of racial intimidation on high school and college campuses. A few months ago three white teens in Jena, La. were accused of hanging nooses in a tree on their high school grounds. They were suspended from school, but they were not criminally prosecuted.
Racial tensions first erupted after a black student tried to cross an invisible color line and sit under the schoolyard's "white tree" to be greeted the next morning by nooses hanging from the tree.
Later, six Black teens were accused of beating a white classmate. Five of the Black teens were initially charged with attempted murder. That charge was reduced to battery for all but one, who has yet to be arraigned; the sixth teen was charged as a juvenile.
Congress woman Maxine Walters denied racism was involved.
"This case has been portrayed by the news media as being about race," Walters said. "And the fact that it takes place in a small southern town lends itself to that portrayal. But it is not and never has been about race. It is about finding justice for an innocent victim and holding people accountable for their actions.""I cannot overemphasize what a villainous act that was. The people that did it should be ashamed of what they unleashed on this town," Walters said.
Mychal Bell, one of six Black teens arrested for allegedly attacking a white classmate in Jena, La., has had both of his convictions in the case thrown out. A Louisiana judge ruled that Bell, a minor at the time of the crime, should not have been tried as an adult.
LaSalle Parish district attorney Reed Walters told a press conference that the case "is not and never has been about race."
He denounced the students who hung the nooses from a tree last September but said he was unable to prosecute them because it did not qualify as a hate-crime -- a conclusion also reached by the region's federal prosecutor.
"This was an awful act," Walters said. "It was not a prank but a vicious and crude statement ... The people who did it should be ashamed of themselves and mortified at the havoc they have unleashed on this community."
Presidential candidate Barrack Obama said "When a noose hangs from a schoolyard tree in the 21st century and young men are treated in a way that is not equal nor just, it is not just an offense to the people of Jena or to the African-American community, it is an offense to the ideals we hold as Americans," he said in a statement.

In Washington, President Bush on 20 Sept 2007 said he is concerned about the racial tensions in Jena, adding that federal law enforcement agencies are monitoring the situation.
"The events in Louisiana have saddened me, and I understand the emotions," he said. "The Justice Department and the FBI are monitoring the situation down there. And all of us in America want there to be, you know, fairness when it comes to justice."

Minority applications to the Coast Guard Academy are down almost to the pre-1970s level. Some might say that is a good thing. I say that it is un-American and can only lead to embarrassment for the Academy and a Pandora’s Box of traumatic incidents for innocent young cadets. I say it sounds like a few rotten apples are being allowed to spoil the whole barrel. This all started at the top of the Chain of Command. How far down has it metastasized?
It is written that he that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind. We reap what we sow. Let us pray for cooler heads as well as calm seas.

12 Jan 2008, Update: White Teenage Female Cadet Claims Sexual assault By Mexican Police on Veracruz Beach.
Two Mexican law enforcement officers accused of assaulting a white female Coast Guard Academy third class cadet and a Black enlisted crew member stationed onboard the Coast Guard Academy training ship USCGC Eagle are still in jail.
The incident occurred during a port call in Veracruz, Mexico, in mid-July 2007.

The case is under review by the First Criminal Court in Veracruz, and the judge has not issued a final decision, according to a Coast Guard Academy spokesman.

The U.S. Embassy has just received a verbal update from the Mexican court.

According to that update, the accused police officers filed an appeal against their imprisonment, and a federal court denied the appeal, but the criminal court is expecting a new appeal. Mexican courts are like German jokes, they are not funny and you never know where they are going or how they will come out.

The third-class female cadet and the male crew member said the police officers attempted to handcuff them, stole some of their possessions, threatened them and forced the female to perform oral sex on one of them, while they were on liberty after a late night swim at a beach in Veracruz, Mexico.

The two policemen have allegedly been charged with robbery, abuse of authority and sexual misconduct.

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