The epidemic of rape in the military may have finally reached a turning point with the case of Lt. Colonel James Wilkerson. After being convicted by a military jury last November of aggravated sexual assault, and sentenced to a year in jail, Wilkerson was set free by Lt. General Craig Franklin, who dismissed the case using power granted to commanders in the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
“My heart is beating fast right now, I am so upset with this,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill at an Armed Services Committee Budget hearing last week. “The victim in this case wasn’t a member of our military. I question now whether that unit that [Wilkerson] returns to, whether there’s any chance that a woman who’s sexually assaulted in that unit would ever say a word, because what that general just said is thatjury’s decision didn’t matter.”
Before being released by Lt. Gen. Franklin’s pardon, Wilkerson faced a year in jail, forfeiture of all pay, and dismissal from the service after being tried and convicted of “aggravated sexual assault” at Aviano Air Base in northeastern Italy. After the trial, Wilkerson petitioned Franklin for clemency per the military’s unique post-trial review process, a process which rarely ends up overturning such cases. According to Stars and Stripes, the petition included “scores of letters from Wilkerson supporters” defending the convicted fighter pilot.
Franklin eventually dismissed the case in February, but gave no specifics as to why. A written statement from the Third Air Force simply said Lt. Gen. Franklin had “concluded that the entire body of evidence was insufficient to meet the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”
“I was assaulted. I reported it. I endured the public humiliation and the end result is that it was all for nothing,” said Wilkerson’s accuser in a statement.
As troubled by this outcome as McCaskill, Sens. Barbara Boxer and Jeanne Shaheen wrote a letter to newly confirmed Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel last week, asking him to review Lt. Gen. Franklin’s decision. They also inquired as to whether he, as Defense Secretary, had the power to overturn the case’s dismissal.
The answer to the second question was no; under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), action by the convening authority–in this case, Lt. Gen. Franklin–is final. As for the case review, Hagel wrote in his March 7th response to Boxer and Shaheen that he had “directed the Secretary of the Air Force, in coordination with the Acting General Counsel of the Department of Defense, to review this case to assess whether all aspects of the UCMJ were followed.” Hagel went on to say that the








