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FORT DRUM--Under pressure from a New York Civil Liberties Union lawsuit, the U.S. Army has granted Conscientious Objector status and honorable discharge to a soldier whom the Army previously had tried to deploy while his CO application was still pending.
Corey D. Martin was stationed at Fort Drum in northern New York as a sergeant after enlisting in the Army in 2001. He applied for discharge as a conscientious objector in December 2005 after realizing that he was ethically opposed to war. The Army granted first-level approval to Martin's application for CO status, but then, while two more levels of approval were still pending, it informed Sergeant Martin that he would be deployed to Afghanistan on March 14.
In response, the New York Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit on Martin's behalf and obtained an injunction to prevent the Army from deploying Martin to Afghanistan while the application was pending.
On April 26, Martin was finally awarded his official CO status and last Thursday he was honorably discharged from the Army. This week the NYCLU will ask a federal judge in Syracuse to dismiss the lawsuit.
Corey Martin joined the Army in 2001, received excellent performance evaluations as a soldier, and was promoted to sergeant. But beginning in the winter of 2002, he began to have personal doubts about war, and he undertook a personal study of texts on war and peace. By the fall of 2005, Sgt. Martin said he realized that he opposed all war morally and ethically and that he could no longer participate as a soldier in the U.S. Army.
The Army Investigating Officer who reviewed Sgt. Martin's CO application in the first round of the three step process, recommended that the application be approved. He determined that Sgt. Martin "is sincere in his beliefs of conscientious objection ... with the underlying belief as his opposition to all wars and the unintentional consequence which war produces, which is casualties and suffering it produces to innocent civilians." 5-30-06
© 2006 North
Country Gazette
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