An Army general who faced a court martial this year after being accused of sexually assaulting a junior officer has been bumped down two grades in rank, the first to receive such a punishment in a decade.
Jeffrey Sinclair will see his rank reduced from brigadier general to lieutenant colonel. Sinclair admitted to having improper relationships with three women who served under him and pleaded guilty to a number of lesser charges in March. He avoided conviction on more serious charges of sexual assault and was fined $20,000. He received no jail time, but Army officials said when Sinclair pleaded guilty that he could see his rank reduced.
“While retirement benefits are mandated by federal law, there is a requirement that an individual must have served satisfactorily in rank before receiving those benefits,” Secretary of the Army John McHugh said in a statement released Friday by the Army. “Sinclair displayed a pattern of inappropriate and at times illegal behavior both while serving as a Brigadier General and a Colonel. I therefore decided there was sufficient evidence and cause to deny him those benefits.”









