San Francisco Chronicle
Judge orders discharge of an anti-war Marine
Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
A federal judge has ordered the Marines to discharge a San Jose lance
corporal as a "conscientious objector" who had an aversion to killing
and participating in war.
Robert Zabala, 23, must be released from the Marines Corps Reserves by mid-April,
U.S
.
District Judge James Ware said in a 21-page ruling Thursday.
"We're very pleased with it," Zabala's attorney, Stephen Collier, said Monday. "I think it's a good decision
and that it makes clear to the armed services that they can't deny
conscientious-objector discharges from the military."
Zabala, a UC Santa Cruz student, began boot camp in June 2003. During a
three-month period that summer, one of Zabala's
superiors repeatedly gave speeches about "blowing s -- up" or "kicking
some f- a-," which caused him to wonder "how someone could be so
motivated to kill," he wrote in his court petition in April 2006.
In August 2003, a fellow recruit committed suicide on the shooting range,
and the same superior used profanities to belittle him, Zabalawrote, saying he
was "abhorred by the blood lust (the superior) seemed to possess."
An instructor showed recruits a "motivational clip" showing Iraqi corpses,
explosions, gunfights and rockets set to the song "Bodies," by the
heavy-metal band Drowning Pool. The lyrics included "Let the bodies hit
the floor," andZabala said he cried -- his only time while in boot camp -- while
other recruits nodded their heads in time with the beat and smiled.
"The sanctity of life that formed the moral center of petitioner's life was
being challenged," Collier wrote in a court filing.
After Zabala returned to UC Santa Cruz, he had a conversation with a fellow Marine
in May 2004. "I began to think about the thousands of people who died
in the past year in war, who didn't die due to just one soldier or
suicide bomber, but largely by an organization," Zabala recounted. "This
organization trains to kill human life."
Zabala, who followed some Buddhist-related traditions but was not a practicing
Buddhist, applied in June 2004 for a discharge on the basis of
conscientious-objector status, but was denied one, court records show.
Zabala's grandfather served in Vietnam, his parents and uncles were in the Navy,
one cousin is in the Air Force and another cousin is the Marines,
according to Collier.
E-mail Henry K. Lee at hlee@sfchronicle.com
.
This article appeared on page D - 5 of the San Francisco Chronicle
LEGAL ACTIVISTS OF COLOR
News, Events, Actions and Commentary on law and social justice. Welcome to the official blog of the United People of Color Caucus (TUPOCC) of the National Lawyers Guild.
News, Events, Actions and Commentary on law and social justice. Welcome to the official blog of the United People of Color Caucus (TUPOCC) of the National Lawyers Guild.
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
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