German Police Detective Has Memory Issues Like Accuser

Unlike most people who read reporter Nancy Montgomery‘s article published Saturday in Stars and Stripes, I noticed something terribly wrong in some of the comments attributed to German police detective Daniel Lorch.  His words conflicted with the real-life events chronicled in my book, Three Days In August, which chronicles the life story of former Army Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart and the military justice debacle that ended his stellar career as a Green Beret and landed him behind bars at Fort Leavenworth.

Kelly A Stewart with Book

Kelly A. Stewart with copy of book.

About halfway into the Stripes article, Montgomery shared comments made by Detective Lorch about his experience as an investigator and his personal opinion “that (Stewart) was guilty” of a variety of sexual assault-related charges stemming from a one-night stand involving the highly-decorated Special Forces soldier and a 28-year-old German woman.  The reporter did not, however, include any comments by the detective about the complete lack of physical evidence and eyewitnesses to the alleged crimes.

Next, Montgomery attributed a statement to the detective about a taxi driver being among the people (plural) who had allegedly seen Stewart’s accuser the morning she left his hotel and later provided corroborating trial testimony.  Apparently, the reporter did not ask the detective for details about those people.  Nor did she ask about their testimony during the trial.  Why?  Because, contrary to what the detective said, only the taxi driver testified as a witness during the trail.  Additional witnesses to her departure from the hotel could not be found.

Finally, Montgomery quoted Detective Lorch on the matter of what the taxi driver allegedly saw when she picked up the accuser outside Stewart’s hotel:

“He described, very detailed, very clearly, her physical damage,” Lorch said. “He was sure something very bad had happened to this woman.”

The detective repeatedly referred to the taxi driver in the masculine sense when, in reality, the taxi driver was a middle-age woman with memory issues.  I highlighted those issues in the book and in an Oct. 7, 2011, post.  An excerpt from the post appears below:

During questioning six months before the trial, according to official court documents, the taxi driver told German police officials, “I’m sorry I don’t see her in front of my eyes anymore right now,” later adding, “I believe she had blonde dyed hair.  I don’t remember her clothing or age right now anymore.”

During the trial one year after she had allegedly picked up Stewart’s 28-year-old accuser in front of the Stuttgart-Marriott Hotel in Sindelfingen, Germany, the taxi driver was able to remember accurate details about Stewart’s accuser (i.e., that she was wearing knee-high boots, had long black hair, etc.) that she wasn’t able to remember when it should have been fresh on her mind.  A miracle perhaps or was it coaching by prosecutors that helped her “improve” her memory?

Montgomery’s article came 24 days after she had contacted me via email, informing me that she was interested in doing a story about the latest development in the Stewart case, had read my website and wanted to talk.

In a written reply to Montgomery, I told her I had spent a lot of time one year earlier with John Vandiver, a Stuttgart-based Stripes reporter, and that the effort — via phone and email — had yielded not a single story.  Furthermore, I told her, I wasn’t excited about speaking with Stripes again and shared a link to a story I published April 19, 2012.

Montgomery persisted, however, and wrote that her story would be about the “latest legal step, the request for reconsideration” from the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.

KAS Stripes BOLO Poster

“Be On The Lookout” poster issued Aug. 20, 2009.

Because I had written about the CAAF-level step in the appeals process Nov. 27, 2012, I decided to make an offer to the reporter.

“Shoot me all of of your questions and let me know your deadline,” I wrote, “then I’ll do my best to answer them by your deadline while allowing time for follow up.”

Rather than shoot me a list of questions, however, Montgomery informed me that she was going to review some of what Vandiver had gathered when he had talked with me a year earlier.  She said she didn’t want to “duplicate some of the work he already did with you and ask questions you’ve already answered.  But I am wondering how you got involved in the case.  I don’t have a deadline yet.”

Montgomery was, of course, referring to a Nov. 21, 2011, phone interview I gave to Vandiver.  It was followed by several email messages and resulted in three articles — #1, #2 and #3 — being published early in 2012.  Unfortunately, all were published by yours truly, not Stripes.

“Nancy, I talked with John about how and why I became interested in the case,” I replied.  “I also wrote a piece about it:  http://threedaysinaugust.com/?p=1136.”

And that was that.

Montgomery did not forward any more questions or make any further attempts to obtain my input.  In fact, her name did not appear on my radar again until today when Stripes published her report about the status of Stewart’s appeals process — a report from which she not only omitted my name and the name of my book, but failed to share critical details I had published Thursday in an update to my Nov. 27 piece, Green Beret’s Defense Attorneys Cite Ineffective Counsel During Trial, Ask Court to Reconsider:

UPDATE 12/20/2012 at 8:30 a.m. Central:  Bad news received from the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces:  “On consideration of Appellant’s petition for reconsideration of this Court’s order issued November 15, 2012, it is, by the Court, this, 19th day of December, 2012,  ORDERED:  That said petition for reconsideration is hereby denied.  For the Court, /s/ William A. DeCicco, Clerk of the Court.”

To read the never-before-published details about Stewart’s wrongful conviction, read the book, Three Days In August.  Based on 18 months of research, interviews with the key players and access to the actual Record of Trial, this book is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

UPDATE 12/28/2012 at 9:42 a.m. Central:  Five days ago, I shared a new observation about the latest Stripes article on Stewart’s case.  It’s a doozie.  See German Police Detective Has Memory Issues Like Accuser.

Yes, I Had Lunch With A Sniper

Today, I had the good fortune of being able to enjoy a good meal and good conversation with Kelly A. Stewart, a former Army Green Beret medic and sniper whose life story — including a wrongful conviction in a military court-martial — is chronicled in my book, Three Days In August.

L-R: Kelly A. Stewart and Bob McCarty.

Though I had communicated with Stewart countless times during the past three years, today’s meal at a Cracker Barrel Country Store in the St. Louis area marked the first time Stewart and I were able to meet in person.  It became possible as a result of Stewart passing through Missouri on the return leg of a cross-country trek to visit family.

Worth noting:  After spending more than two hours across the table from him, I’m convinced more than ever before that he is the victim of military justice gone awry.

To read the never-before-published details about Stewart’s wrongful conviction, read the book, Three Days In August.  Based on 18 months of research, interviews with the key players and access to the actual Record of Trial, this book is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

Green Beret’s Defense Attorneys Cite Ineffective Counsel During Trial, Ask Court to Reconsider

Since publishing news almost two weeks ago about the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces denying former Army Green Beret Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart’s appeal, a new development has surfaced:  William E. Cassara and Philip D. Cave, the attorneys handling Stewart’s appeals, have filed a Petition for Reconsideration with CAAF, the nation’s highest military court.

Notably, the petition cites ineffective assistance of counsel — an item mentioned in the July 26 decision of the Army Court of Criminal Appeals to affirm Stewart’s 2009 conviction and sentence on sexual assault charges — and requests CAAF reconsider Stewart’s case.

In plain English, Stewart’s new defense attorneys argue that the defense attorneys who represented the highly-decorated combat veteran during his court-martial didn’t follow the legal steps necessary to compel — or attempt to compel — the German government to produce the accuser’s mental health records.  Those records, many believe, would have provided the court with a great deal of insight about the accuser and may have convinced members of the court-martial panel that the accusations against Stewart were baseless.

You can read more about these issues in my post, Army Judge Violates Soldier’s Constitutional Rights, published May 11, 2011.  To read the complete, never-before-published details of this case, obtained through interviews with the key players and access to the actual Record of Trial, order a copy of the book, Three Days In August:  A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight For Military Justice.

UPDATE 12/20/2012 at 8:30 a.m. Central:  Bad news received from the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces:  “On consideration of Appellant’s petition for reconsideration of this Court’s order issued November 15, 2012, it is, by the Court, this, 19th day of December, 2012,  ORDERED:  That said petition for reconsideration is hereby denied.  For the Court, /s/ William A. DeCicco, Clerk of the Court.”

Three Days In August is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

Highest Military Court Denies Green Beret’s Appeal

The Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces has denied former Army Green Beret Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart‘s appeal of the wrongful conviction and sentence handed down by a court-martial panel in Germany almost 39 months ago.

The CAAF decision came today, almost four months after the Army Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the soldier’s conviction and sentence.  Stewart’s sentence came at the end of a two-day military trial in August 2009 during which Stewart was found guilty of a handful of sexual assault charges after a German woman alleged she had been raped and kidnapped by the soldier.

Now, unless the highly-decorated combat veteran receives a presidential pardon, he will likely bear the “sex offender” label for the rest of his life.

To gain an understanding of how Stewart’s prosecution went down, read “THE BASICS” of his case.

To read the never-before-published details obtained through interviews with the key players and access to the actual Record of Trial, order a copy of the book, Three Days In August:  A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight For Military Justice.  a

Three Days In August is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

Facebook Censors Special Operations Veterans

Mark Zuckerberg‘s social networking gurus at Facebook seem to think the men and women of Special Operations Speaks, who’ve spent much of their lives fighting on behalf of their fellow Americans do not deserve the freedom to exercise the rights guaranteed them under the First Amendment — at least, not when that exercise involves criticizing President Barack Obama days before an election about his mishandling of and lying about Sept. 11 events in Benghazi, Libya.

On Saturday, a Benghazi-focused meme (above) was posted on the organization’s website by Political Media Inc. President Larry Ward, the man who handles SOS social media and publicity efforts.  It’s message:  “Obama called the SEALs and they got Bin Laden.  When the SEALs called Obama, they got denied.”

Twenty-four hours later, Ward was informed by Facebook monitors that he had violated Facebook’s Statement of Rights and Responsibilities with the meme.  As a result, the SOS account was suspended for 24 hours.  At last check, the meme is back up on the SOS Facebook page.

Before the election next Tuesday, please consider donating to Special Operations Speaks and spread the word about how Obama denied assistance to people on the ground, including one U.S. ambassador and two former Navy SEALs, in Benghazi.

FYI:  I applaud the guys at Special Operations Speaks for taking a courageous stand on this issue and also for endorsing my book, “Three Days In August,” which chronicles the life and wrongful conviction of former Army Green Beret Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart.  To learn more about the book, read this post on the SOS Noble Warriors webpage.

Bob McCarty is the author of “Three Days In August: A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight For Military Justice,” a nonfiction book that’s available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com. His second book, “The CLAPPER MEMO,” is set for release this fall.

‘Three Days In August’ Marks One-Year Anniversary as Second Book Nears Completion

Chronicling the life story and wrongful conviction of Army Green Beret Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart, “Three Days In August” turned one-year old this week.  At the same time, my second book, “The Clapper Memo,” is inching closer and closer to publication.

During the past 12 months, I’ve had many opportunities to share the basics of Stewart’s story and have found many Americans nod their heads and empathize with the highly-decorated combat veteran’s plight but refuse to engage — by reading the whole story, that is — and speak out on behalf of those in uniform who have been victimized by the military justice system.  I hope that changes.

Regardless, I will continue to tell Stewart’s story and to tell the stories of others who, after reading “Three Days In August,” have approached me with stories of their loved ones — usually husbands and sons — that are eerily similar to Stewart’s.  In addition, I will begin sharing details of another story.

My second nonfiction book, “The Clapper Memo” is set for release this fall and tells the story of a 40-year-old turf war few Americans even realize is taking place.

What started out in April 2009 as a 27-day effort to obtain answers from the Pentagon about the deployment of new interrogation technology to combat zones turned into almost four years of research, investigation and interviews during which I learned more than I ever imagined I might about the people, products and problems inside the interrogation area.  And, trust me, it contains details high-ranking government officials would rather not see made public.

Most importantly, I learned how wrong decisions made by some of those aforementioned government officials have resulted in dozens of American soldiers and citizens being injured or killed in Afghanistan, the victims of so-called “insider” or “green-on-blue” attacks.  One of those people bearing some responsibility is Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr.

People from all walks of life shared insights, insider information and occasional doses of insanity related to their personal experiences in the arena.

People from across the United States as well as around the world — in places like Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay, Iraq and Mexico — shared.  They shared during scheduled and unscheduled interviews.  Through official and unofficial channels.  By phone, email message, Facebook message, Twitter and “snail mail.”

Some shared without being asked.  Most told the truth.  Some did not.

Some were forthcoming with information.  Others forced me to use the federal Freedom of Information Act and state “sunshine” laws as tools for flushing out answers.

More than anything else, it was old-fashioned detective work that produced results.

I hope you’ll make plans now to read it.  Meanwhile, you can still order a copy of “Three Days In August.”  It’s available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

Note:  “The Clapper Memo” is the working title of this book but, for reasons I will explain in the near future, will change upon publication.

Green Berets’ Stories Similar Yet Vastly Different

Jeffrey MacDonald, convicted in the 1970 stabbing and beating deaths of his pregnant wife and two daughters, recently had a new hearing and is waiting for a federal judge to decide whether he will receive a new trial or have his conviction vacated altogether, according to a recent Los Angeles Times report.  He’s not alone among former Army Green Berets hoping a judge will act in his favor.  Kelly A. Stewart hopes five of them will.

Unlike MacDonald, Stewart is waiting on a five-judge panel at the Court of Appeals of the Armed Forces to decide whether he gets a new trial or some other form of clemency.

Unlike MacDonald, Stewart wasn’t convicted of murder.  Instead, he was convicted of crimes that resulted in him spending time behind bars at the U.S. Military Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and being branded a “sex offender” for the rest of his life.  Sadly, his conviction was based almost exclusively on the testimony of his accuser, a former mental patient.

Unlike MacDonald, Stewart’s case doesn’t hinge upon new DNA evidence or new witness testimony.  Everything — including the post-trial testimony of several individuals who said Stewart’s accuser lied during the trial — has been on the table at every stage of Stewart’s appeals process which, so far, has been unsuccessful.


While MacDonald’s case went on to become the subject of a 1984 movie based on the book, “Fatal Vision,” by Joe McGinniss, Stewart’s case became the subject of my first nonfiction book, “Three Days In August,” published one year ago.

To learn more about MacDonald’s case, keep your eyes on the headlines.

To learn more about Stewart’s case, read “The Basics.”  Better yet, order a copy of “Three Days In August.”  It’s available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

Some Guys Have All the Luck — Version 3.0

When I published Some Guys Have All the Luck back in June, I suspected it wouldn’t be the last time I shared news of a military officer receiving better treatment than one of his enlisted subordinates — and I was right.  Forty-five days later, I published Some Guys Have All the Luck — Version 2.0, and, today, I have yet another similar story.

Shown in this Nov. 16, 2011, U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Jeffrey A. Sinclair, then-deputy commanding general of support with the 82nd Airborne Division and Regional Command-South, speaks with Afghan media outside of a school near Forward Operating Base Howz-e-Madad in Kandahar, Afghanistan. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Amanda Hils)

A Special Forces friend sent me a link to a CNN article about an Army general facing possible court-martial on sexual misconduct and other charges.  From the article:

Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Sinclair has been charged with “forcible sodomy, wrongful sexual conduct, attempted violation of an order, violations of regulations by wrongfully engaging in inappropriate relationships, misusing a government travel charge card” and several other counts, said Col. Kevin Arata, a spokesman for the Fort Bragg-based 82nd Airborne Division, which since its creation during World War I has been one of the most celebrated units in the Army.

At this point, I have no idea whether or not the charges against General Sinclair are legit.  I will, however, keep my eye on this case and others like it. Why?  Because I hate to see officers — and I was one — receive more-favorable treatment than their enlisted subordinates — people like Green Beret Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart, the man whose life and wrongful conviction are chronicled in my book, Three Days In August, endorsed by some very special Special Operations veterans.  At the same time, I hate to see good officers railroaded the way Stewart was.

Stay tuned!

UPDATE 10/08/2012 at 8:53 a.m. Central:  The question is now being asked, “Is retirement an option for general accused of forcible sodomy?  Stewart never got that option.

UPDATE 10/27/12 at 8:56 p.m. Central:  An Article 32 hearing has been set for Nov. 5.

 FYI:  Three Days In August: A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight For Military Justice is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.comAlso, my second book, THE CLAPPER MEMO, is set for release this fall spring.

Keep Political Correctness Out of Military Justice System

The last thing the military needs is for more political correctness to be injected into the military justice system, but that seems to be what’s happening, according to a Military.com article published today:

Congress has floated a bill that would take ruling authority away from commanders in sexual assault cases and hand it over to an independent panel.

The bill comes as Pentagon leaders scramble to tackle a rising number of sexual assault cases spreading through the military. In 2011, servicemembers filed over 3,000 sexual assaults reports.

While I’m all in favor of prosecuting cases of sexual assault against women in the military, the quest by prosecutors to meet artificially-set goals for successful prosecutions has resulted in an emphasis being placed on the prosecution of male soldiers even when no evidence or eyewitnesses can be produced!

As evidence of this, I point to the case of Army Green Beret Sgt. 1st Class Kelly A. Stewart, the man whose life story and wrongful conviction are the subject of my book, “Three Days In August: A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight For Military Justice.”

During the first two days of his court-martial on sexual assault and kidnapping charges, prosecutors presented no physical evidence and/or eyewitnesses to the alleged crimes.  Instead, their case was based almost entirely on the testimony of the accuser, a one-time mental patient who, with the backing of the German government, refused to allow her medical records to be entered as evidence.  As a result, members of the court-martial panel found Stewart guilty on several counts and sentenced him, among other things, to eight years in prison and branded him a sex offender.

Read the reviews.

Based on extensive interviews and never-before-published details taken from the actual Record of Trial, “Three Days In August” paints a portrait of military justice gone awry that’s certain to make your blood boil.

“Three Days In August” is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

Lawyer: 90 Percent of Military Sexual Assault Cases Would Be Thrown Out of Civilian Courts Due to Lack of Evidence

In a Military.com article published Aug. 13, military defense lawyer Michael Waddington estimated that 90 percent of the sexual assault cases taken to court-martial would be thrown out of civilian courts due to lack of evidence.  Unfortunately, the attorney’s estimate offers little solace to Kelly A. Stewart, a highly-decorated Army Green Beret and combat veteran who faces the burden of living the rest of his life as a convicted sex offender if military justice continues to elude him.

Waddington’s words stand as one of several excerpts particularly relevant to the case of Stewart, a man whose life and wrongful conviction are chronicled in my book, “Three Days In August:  A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight For Military Justice.”

Unfortunately for Stewart, his case was not thrown out.  In fact, as described below, quite the opposite happened:

Kelly A. Stewart

An elite Green Beret, U.S. Army Sergeant First Class Kelly A. Stewart admitted in court to having a one-night stand with a 28-year-old German woman.  His accuser did, too.  But that’s where the similarities end in their accounts of what transpired inside his Stuttgart hotel room.

One year later, the highly-decorated combat veteran found himself on trial, facing a slew of charges — including rape and kidnapping — that could send him to prison for life.  His court-martial had begun.

During the first two days of the trial, prosecutors presented no physical evidence and/or eyewitnesses to the alleged crimes.  Instead, their case was based almost entirely on the testimony of the accuser, a one-time mental patient who, with the backing of the German government, refused to allow her medical records to be entered as evidence.

Kelly A. Stewart

At 15 minutes before midnight on the trial’s second day, Stewart was found guilty on several counts and the court was adjourned.  The following morning, he was sentenced to eight years behind bars at Fort Leavenworth and branded a “sex offender” for life.

Ten months into his sentence, Stewart was flown back to Germany for a post-trial hearing during which the new witnesses revealed that Stewart’s accuser had lied several times during the trial.  While their words were largely ignored by the military judge, they were not entirely ignored by the one-star general with authority over the case.

Three months later, the general took five years off of Stewart’s sentence and, among other things, made him eligible for parole immediately.  In Army terms, “immediately” meant he was released March 31, 2011.

Kelly A. Stewart

Stewart spent the next 18 months working in a family member’s business on the East Coast and fighting unsuccessfully for a new trial.  Then, on Aug. 20, 2012, his sentence ended and, technically, he became free.

To date, Stewart’s further attempts to get a new trial or some other form of clemency from the military justice system have failed, leaving him with only one level of appeal — the Court of Appeals of the Armed Forces — remaining.  If justice continues to elude him, he’ll carry the “sex offender” label forever.

Based on extensive interviews and never-before-published details taken from the actual Record of Trial, “Three Days In August: A U.S. Army Special Forces Soldier’s Fight for Military Justice” paints a portrait of military justice gone awry that’s certain to make your blood boil.

Click to Order

Read it, and you won’t believe this kind of justice can happen to someone who, prior to being accused of crimes by a former mental patient, had an unblemished record and stood among the best of the best as one of the world’s most-elite warriors.

“Three Days In August” is available in paperback and ebook via most online booksellers, including Amazon.com.

For more information about the book, visit ThreeDaysInAugust.com.

To contribute to his legal defense fund, visit http://SaveThisSoldier.com.

CORRECTION 9/19/2012 at 8:38 a.m. Central:  I mistakenly attributed comments from the Military.com article in the first two paragraphs above to Philip Cave.  It has been corrected.

NOTE:  My second nonfiction book, “The CLAPPER MEMO,” is set for release this fall.