Officers of the armed forces were no different than the enlisted, after being convicted. There were quite a few convicted officers in the USDB. Remember that the USDB housed anyone that had 7 years or more of a sentence. I mention this, because I have found a website by a convicted officer that did a very short time(bid). He states, how he had changed and felt betrayed by his fellow colleagues and the system. I thought to myself, that is how the lower ranked enlisted and junior officers always felt, abandoned by their superiors when things got hot.
I was able to befriend a few officers during active-duty service and learned how they were treated. All militaries are similar, but despite these shortcomings, the United States still had the best military and base facilities compared to the other nations. Best soldiers because this was before woke-ism and toxic masculinity psy-op concepts to destroy ourselves. I digressed so allow me to discuss the inmate officers, that were incarcerated with me.
The first senior officer I will mention, was a Lieutenant Colonel. His story is online and can easily be found. He killed his wife while stationed at the War College. Mr. B. killed his wife over porn. She kept nagging him and he lost it. He bludgeoned her to death and choked her with some kind of cord. He was only given a 25-year sentence and eligible for parole after ten years. An officer can be more remorseful and morally righteous because he has more rank. (sarcasm) He seemed to be a nice guy and very intelligent. I learned a few things from him about geo-politics. But I disagreed with him about the German 88 flak gun’s range for a tank kill. He never acted he was better than anyone else. Mr. B. kept his nose clean and was an avid long-distance runner. Those were his killing time moments, and he would also run in his cell, if we were locked down. Mr. B. was always running and kept his head down.
Another Lieutenant Colonel, this one I befriended. I do not know what he did. Allegedly, it was some form of domestic violence while stationed in South Korea, but I could not and have not found his name online. His education was in medical science. He told me then; the new war is going to be an informational war. This is very true today and active. L.C. did not like to work out and kept to himself as well. We both vacated the premises about the same time. He was with me in the Latino group.
The next officer was a Marine L.C., that was convicted for having sex with his underage stepdaughter. He was not respected by anyone in prison. He was punked out a few times and told to stay in his lane. He quickly associated with the molesters because they were the only ones to accept him. Not much to say about him.
There were a few junior officers in there as well. One I befriended, and he was bi-polar according to him. This guy was in for fraud and forgery etc. He was very methodical and highly intelligent. He made parole and made it right back. I guess not so intelligent, but I was disappointed to see him return. It is always easy for people reading this to say, “if you were so smart, then how did you end up in there”? Shit can happen to anyone. Learn to always control your own emotions.
Another junior officer was a snitch. He seemed alright and was in there for some white-collar crime. He tried to set up some inmates with trading and selling prescription drugs. He had been caught buying, therefore became a snitch. My group was in the know and only those that had to know had been informed to watch their backs. I had found out after he was transferred to a lower security facility for his personal safety.
And the last junior officer was a Captain. This guy was cool. He was in for stealing money from Army finance (lol). He was a great volleyball player on our team. That guy could spike the ball!! He had been to Sao Paulo, Brazil, and told us some crazy stories about the favelas.
Overall, they were men as anyone else, but one notable difference from the enlisted. They all worked out except for one. Physical appearance was paramount to them as it is to me. They adjusted with their new rank, which was the prison system number and type of crime. I forgot to mention a few more officers that were there.
A former Air Force Captain was a homosexual in there for some sex crime. However, he had done some time and proven himself to be solid. He was in the white group. I was friendly with many of the whites. Yes, people were friends with everyone in there. The only discrimination type in there is what crime you committed. It didn’t mean you were having sexual relations with him, just because you were seen conversing. He was very humorous and comedic, and he had his type, and it was hilarious but sometimes it was too much. Especially, when you are confined with that person, then you need a time out from that person.
And lastly, a Major that had been stationed in South Korea. You can find his story online. He was accused of murdering his wife, but was found guilty of manslaughter. That implies her death was by accident. I do not know many details about his case. The facts are that he had a temperament and once had punched his daughter in the nose. He looked liked a tough guy. Worked out avidly was respected and accepted quickly. He didn’t look the type you wanted to confront.
Allow me to mention again about the website that a Colonel has online. I had found it by accident searching my domain name. He did only a year or less. All those years of service and hard work to be lost over a slap on the wrist type crime. I do not know which crime(s) he committed, because he did not mention it. Readers in the U.S.C.M.J. United States Code of Military Justice, a military member can be prosecuted for adultery. Another one is conduct of unbecoming an officer, which is very broad. Some laws are like a fishing trawlers net. It’s very political in my opinion.
