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ArticlesMilitary Recruiting: Personnel Crunch


I-Team: Military Recruitment Follow-Up

Jim Osman, CBS Local
July 19, 2007

PHILADELPHIA A CBS 3 I-Team investigation prompted action by
the U.S. Senate. The I-Team's hidden camera report earlier this year
showed military recruiters misleading young recruits.

Investigative Reporter Jim Osman has a follow up on the story.

Surveillance video has long been used to spot criminal activity or to
document police conduct.

But now the government may use surveillance cameras to hold military
recruiters accountable.

Pennsylvania Senator Bob Casey supports a congressional committee
proposal to put surveillance cameras inside military recruiting
stations to monitor activities of recruiters.

Senator Casey told Jim Osman during an interview in Washington, D.C.,
"If it takes cameras or tough tactics to investigate these people
then we should do that."

Casey said the pressure put on recruiters to enlist new soldiers to
send off to places like Iraq shouldn't be a scapegoat for deception or abuse.

The Senator said, "There's no excuse for this, a lot of people have
pressure in their lives people in the military deal with pressure all
the time and the overwhelming majority handle that pressure appropriately. "

What caught the attention of the U.S. Senate was our CBS 3 I-Team
undercover investigation which exposed recruiters who were stretching
the rules and the truth to get our undercover producer to sign up for
military service.

Half of the military recruiters our producer spoke to misled him or
tried to bend the rules.

And a common refrain: being a soldier in Iraq was as dangerous as
everyday life. Statistics show that is false.

One recruiter told our undercover producer, "Your chances of dying is
like being out here. You know what I'm saying ... you going to die.
You could fall off your bed and that's it."

The Defense Department has until early next year to develop a
proposal for the surveillance cameras.

Senator Casey said the cameras may also discourage male recruiters
from sexually harassing young female recruits, which also has been a problem.

The Senate Armed Services Committee proposing the cameras said it's
pushing the idea to give potential recruits and their parents peace of mind.


This archive consists of a topically organized selection of articles culled by members of the Counter-Recruitment List Serve from printed publications and web sites. The archive is not complete. We have chosen material relevant to the work of Eugene, Oregon’s Committee for Countering Military Recruitment that we think may be of use to others individuals and groups with similar goals.

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