The closely-watched court martial of Brigadier General Jeffrey Sinclair drew to a close on Monday as Sinclair, 51, pleaded guilty to lesser charges as part of a deal reached with prosecutors. The most serious charges — including sexual assault and two other counts that could have landed Sinclair in prison for life and required him to register as a sex offender — were dropped.
The lesser charges include disobeying a commander’s order not to contact his alleged victim, using demeaning language to refer to female officers and “maltreatment” of his alleged victim. The Times reported that in that section of the plea document, Sinclair admits to having acted “in a manner which when viewed objectively under all the circumstances was unwarranted, unjustified and unnecessary and reasonably could have caused mental harm or suffering during the course of an ongoing inappropriate sexual relationship.”
In exchange, prosecuters dismissed charges that Sinclair forced the woman, a now 34-year-old captain, to perform oral sex on him and later threatened to kill her family. The general, 51 and married with two children, pleaded guilty earlier this month to charges of having inappropriate relationships with subordinate officers and possession of pornography.
A military judge accepted Sinclair’s guilty plea on Monday. A sentencing hearing is expected to begin after a short recess.
Sinclair’s prosecution has received intense scrutiny, both because of his rank and because of the recent focus on the military’s fight to curb rampant sexual abuse within the armed forces. The defense received a major break when the judge presiding over the case ruled that a commander overseeing the case may have been improperly influenced to go forward with the prosecution because of the recent focus on sexual assault in the military. The judge, Colonel James Pohl, suspended the court martial as a result, but said that prosecutors could renew an earlier deal that they had offered Sinclair.









