Nothing should happen to him outside the court of public opinion. Feel free to advocate for his lose in his next election. Kelley on the other hand violated the UCMJ, which he is still subject to even today. Issues, like personnel, subject to the code, attempting to undermine the authority of the chain of command are exactly why the UCMJ exists and why it only applies to military personnel. You and the others can stomp your feet and howl at the moon for all it matters, but Kelley is subject to the code and accountable for the consequences of his actions under the code.
For sedition. You may agree with them, but that just means you’re part of the problem. If military personnel has done something illegal, indict them. Otherwise, shut your pie hole.
Quit clutching those pearls. No one is getting killed. Kelly is getting a cut in pay and a lower rank. Why do you continue to push untrue things day after day on here?
He didn’t commit sedition. The civilian charge would be subversion. The military charges are conduct prejudicial to the good order and discipline, and incitement to mutiny. And as a field grade officer Kelley knew better. He can always dispute the punishment and have it referred to a General Courts Marshal. Of course the risk is reduction to grade E1, loss of all pay and privileges, including retirement benefits, confinement and fine as specified in the UCMJ and having his discharge changed to dishonorable. The military Justice system can be rather strict on matters of good order and discipline.
Great idea.
Kudos to Hegseth.
Down to the mere bottom of the scale.
Send a message.
Same with the Mayor the F in Minnesota.
DOJ needs to make HIM an example too.
Oh well Grand jury said no and Judge Jugwine fails again
"Under Pirro, a former Fox News host and longtime friend of Trump’s, the U.S. attorney’s office has also struggled to secure indictments and convictions, including when a jury acquitted a man who chucked a Subway sandwich at a federal officer patrolling Washington at Trump’s orders.
It’s very rare for federal grand juries to say prosecutors failed to meet the probable cause threshold for an indictment."