73.1 F
Memphis
Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Buy now

spot_img

NJ Airman Convicted of Federal Crime After Being 6 Minutes Late for a Meeting 

Mark Makela/Getty Images

Finding a job is hard enough and now, 33-year-old Mario Manago, a soon-to-be Air Force veteran may find it even harder after he was convicted back in March of a federal crime; the federal crime of being six minutes late to a meeting.

According to NJ.com, the airman who has served in the Air Force for 12 years was convicted at court-martial on March 9 for failing to go to his “appointed place of duty.” Manago was late to a meeting that he had originally requested with his commander to discuss his concerns that he was being unfairly treated by supervisors at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst in Burlington County.

“When he said I was guilty, it didn’t hit me until after I sat down and thought about it,” Manago told the news site, recalling that he realized he now has a conviction to deal with “for being six minutes late to a meeting I requested, that was about wrongdoing. Something is wrong.”

Advertisement

As if that was not bad enough, before the judge could even hand down a punishment, Manago found out that he was out of the Air Force anyway because his commander had demoted him, and as NJ.com notes, Air Force rules put a cap on the number of years that someone can serve as a senior airman. Manago is now over that cap and as a result will be honorably discharged on Saturday.

“I wanted to retire from the Air Force,” he lamented.

Now he’s on the job market, with a criminal record to navigate.

Advertisement

Manago told NJ.com that his military career began to fall apart in 2016, when he voiced complaints to his superiors about issues that he perceived with a mission, as well as the way he was being treated. He believes that his memos about his concerns annoyed his superiors to the point that they lashed back.

“It was not about punctuality. It was about this commander sending a message to Mario and punishing him for complaining,” Manago’s attorney, Douglas Cody said.

Of course, Manago’s whistleblower complaint was dismissed by the base’s Inspector General, “but I think a fair observer looking from the outside can see the connection,” Cody,a retired Marine judge advocate added. “If the system or command decides they’re against you, with the military being a hyper-regulated organization, it’s easy to bring to bear against someone they don’t like.”

Advertisement

A spokesperson for the joint base said that Manago’s complaints were fully investigated and found to be unsubstantiated, also confirming that Mango was convicted for being late to a meeting.

“The U.S. Air Force, out of mission necessity, expects discipline from our military members and for airmen to conduct themselves in accordance to Air Force standards and core values,” spokesperson Shaun Eagan told NJ.com in a statement. “Accordingly, it is a commander’s responsibility to hold the members of the unit accountable for misconduct.”

However, Cody said that Manago was late because he was unable to abandon his post elsewhere on the base. Manago had also reportedly called to reschedule the meeting, but was told he could not.

Advertisement

“Leaving to go to a personal meeting I requested would have been dereliction of duty,” Manago said. So he stayed.

“The idea that you can charge someone with a criminal offense for being six minutes late without any aggravating circumstance is very draconian,” Cody said.

When the airman did get to the meeting, he said his commander, Lt. Col. Eric B. Quidley was “not impressed” with him, mocking his memos and making him read aloud from them.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Manago’s story comes at a time when a study was recently released, showing that black troops are more likely to be punished by commanders and courts across every service branch.

“Over the past decade, racial disparities have persisted in the military justice system without indications of improvement,” the report by advocacy organization Protect Our Defenders states. “These disparities are particularly striking for black service members, who face military justice or disciplinary action at much higher rates than white service members in every service branch. In fact, the size of the disparity between white and black service members’ military justices involvement has remained consistent over the years, and, in the case of the Air Force and Marine Corps has increased.”

The study noted that black airmen, among the other particulars, that black airmen were 71 percent more likely than white airmen to face court-martial or nonjudicial punishment.

However, Manago is not sure that his race played a huge part in his case. But in the meantime, he is appealing his demotion. He requested clemency regarding his conviction, but that was not granted.

Advertisement

In the mean time he can only hope that other places of employment are open to hiring someone convicted of a federal crime, especially when he has to check the box on the job application, that often asks about prior convictions.

“It’s going to be weird, trying to explain it,” he said. “They might think I’m joking.”

Advertisement

Read more at NJ.com  

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

Related Articles

Stay Connected

21,507FansLike
2,634FollowersFollow
17,200SubscribersSubscribe
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Articles