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Soldier from Eugene freed from confinement
Sarah Skidmore, The Associated Press
January 4, 2007
PORTLAND -
Army Pvt. Suzanne Swift, who said she had been sexually harassed by
officers and refused to return to duty in Iraq, was freed Wednesday.
Swift, 22, formerly of Eugene, had been confined at Fort Lewis in
Washington state since December after pleading guilty to being absent
without leave as part of a plea agreement with the Army, which included
a demotion.
Swift served in Iraq from February 2004 to February 2005. Her unit was
sent back to Iraq in January 2006, but she refused to go and stayed
away for about five months.
Swift said her supervisor in Iraq coerced her into a sexual relationship and that other superiors had harassed or abused her.
The Army substantiated her allegations against one soldier at Fort
Lewis. That soldier later left the Army after a reprimand from his
battalion commander and reassignment to another unit.
Swift was arrested in June. Her plea, which came during a summary court-martial, helped her avoid a federal conviction.
``She is basically moving on with her career,'' said Keith Scherer,
Swift's lawyer, who specializes in military cases. ``It's a phenomenal
result.''
The soldier is heading to Eugene to see her family, said her mother,
Sara Rich. And in March, she will leave for California, where she is
being reassigned to train as a shipping and ordering clerk, Rich said.
As part of the plea agreement, she will remain in the Army for five years and eventually could earn an honorable discharge.
Rich said the release was bittersweet - she is happy to see her
daughter again but frustrated by the problems that Swift's experience
represents in the military.
The release signals the end of Swift's legal conflict with the Army, her lawyer said.
But Rich said her daughter still suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder because of the experience.
And she still must work as a member of the military that Rich says allowed the violence against her to occur.
``I still think there is a huge amount of work to be done around military sexual violence,'' Rich said.
``We need to do some major work as to what happened to her. ... Then we
can actually enact some change so this doesn't happen to another
soldier.''
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