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Drill sergeant gets 6-month term, discharge in recruit abuse case

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  • NEW: Marine boot camp instructor also has rank cut to private, pay forfeited
  • NEW: Defense attorney says he'll seek clemency request, file an appeal
  • Instructor accused of striking recruits, stomping on their belongings
  • Two other instructors from San Diego training camp face charges
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SAN DIEGO, California (AP) -- A military jury on Thursday sentenced a Marine drill instructor to six months in the brig and gave him a bad-conduct discharge for abusing 23 recruits.

Sgt. Jerrod M. Glass also received a reduction in rank to private and pay forfeiture. He had faced a maximum sentence of 10 years of confinement.

Former colleagues lined up to hug Glass and shake his hand after the verdict was read. Glass, 25, hugged his parents. His mother broke down in tears in the courtroom filed to capacity, mainly with Glass' supporters, including some of the recruits he was accused of abusing.

Earlier, prosecutors recommended he spend two years in the brig and receive a bad-conduct discharge.

"You need to send the message this is not tolerated," Marine Capt. Brent Sticker told jurors.

The instructor's attorney had asked jurors to take into account Glass' previous exemplary record and sentence him to 60 days of restricted duty and reduction to a rank of their choice.

"There's ways to deal with Sgt. Glass without throwing him out," Capt. Greg Jensen said.

"This wasn't meaningless, senseless violence," Jensen said of the alleged abuse. "It was done with the intent to assist [recruits]."

On Wednesday, Glass was found guilty of eight counts of cruelty and maltreatment, destruction of personal property, assault and violating orders on how to properly treat recruits. The jury deliberated two hours before handing down the sentence Thursday.

Glass was accused of ordering one recruit to jump headfirst into a trash can and then pushing him farther into the container. He is also accused of striking recruits with a tent pole and a heavy flashlight. None of the recruits was seriously injured.

During the courts-martial, witnesses testified Glass routinely stomped on recruits' toiletry kits, breaking razors and soap containers inside, for minor infractions like not displaying name tags properly. They also said Glass and another drill instructor would also line recruits up after meals and force them to down liters of water from their canteens.

Glass had worked as a drill instructor at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego for less than a year when the mistreatment occurred. He was relieved of drill instructor duty in February.

Glass' mother, Barbara Glass, said, "I still believe he did not do anything he was not instructed to do ... by his superiors. If it's denied, I know it's a bald-faced lie by the Marine Corps."

Another defense attorney, Capt. Patrick J. Callahan, said he filed a clemency request to have the Marine released from the brig and have his discharge dismissed. He said they would also file an appeal.

"He took it very hard. He loves the Marine Corps. Pretty much his entire adult life has been in the Marine Corps," Callahan told The Associated Press later.

Glass had previously been an exemplary Marine, according to both the defense and prosecution. He graduated at the top of his class and volunteered for two tours in Iraq before becoming a drill instructor.

Pfc. Bradley Montgomery, 20, who was one of the recruits in Glass' platoon, said the sentence was too harsh. Montgomery testified on behalf of the prosecution under orders.

"This whole thing is ridiculous," he said. "Sgt. Glass thought of us as his own kids."

Glass was one of three drill instructors charged with abusing recruits. Sgt. Robert C. Hankins and Sgt. Brian M. Wendel are facing special courts-martial on separate charges. A fourth instructor, Sgt. Joseph Villagomez, received administrative punishment.

About 17,000 recruits graduate each year from the depot. It is one of two Marine training depots nationwide; the other is in Parris Island, South Carolina. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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