Whatever Happened to LtCol Scheller?

 

Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Scheller was court-martialed on Thursday, October 14, charged with five counts of violating the Uniform Code of Military Justice including: showing contempt towards officials; showing disrespect towards superior commissioned officers and failure to obey an order or regulation.

He pled guilty on all counts, as he surely must have, given his call for “accountability” in the ranks.

Prior to the hearing, a deal was reached between prosecutors and the defense team, in which Scheller agreed to accept a maximum punishment of a letter of reprimand, forfeiture of two-thirds of a month’s pay for a year, and the processing of his request to resign from the Corps, the disposition and type of discharge to be determined by the Secretary of the Navy.

The judge in the case, USMC Colonel Glen Hines, unsurprisingly accepted Scheller’s guilty plea, finding him so on all counts.

In something of a surprise, however, the judge did not impose the agreed-upon maximum sentence, calling for the letter of reprimand, and the forfeiture of only $5,000 of one month’s pay.  (He stated in his verdict that it would have been his preference for Scheller to forfeit the amount for two months of pay, but that he gave Scheller credit for time served in the brig.) Scheller will now begin the process of separation, and the type of discharge he receives (honorable, general, other than honorable, bad conduct, dishonorable) will be at the judgment and discretion of the Secretary of the Navy.

In his ruling, Col Hines also sharply criticized the prosecutorial (ie: USMC) handling of the case, saying that the entirety of Scheller’s videos showed a man who appeared “to be in pain,” “confused,” and “significantly frustrated,” rather than the violent revolutionary portrayed in the prosecution’s testimony. He was also critical of what appear to have been leaks to the press about Scheller’s character and mental health status, as well as his pre-trial confinement, saying that they raised the specter of “unlawful command influence.”

All in all, an interesting conclusion to the case, in which no-one involved got off scot-free.

That happy outcome, apparently, is reserved only for those at the highest levels, and those in charge of the debacle for which Scheller’s outspokenness and unflinching honesty cost him his career.

“I am standing here today pleading guilty; this is me accepting accountability. But it deeply pains me that my senior leaders are incapable of being as courageous.” — LtCol Stuart Scheller, at his court-martial, October 14, 2021

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  1. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    Thanks for the  update. That is indeed important to know about.

    • #1
  2. Percival Thatcher
    Percival
    @Percival

    Scheller did the crime knowing he’d do the time, but felt that his honor required it. I wonder if any of the superior officers to whom he “showed disrespect” can say as much?

    Showing them disrespect was wrong. They merited utter contempt. They still do.

    • #2
  3. cdor Member
    cdor
    @cdor

    Percival (View Comment):

    Scheller did the crime knowing he’d do the time, but felt that his honor required it. I wonder if any of the superior officers to whom he “showed disrespect” can say as much?

    Showing them disrespect was wrong. They merited utter contempt. They still do.

    They merit utter contempt from us not under their command. Scheller knew he had to fall on his sword to preserve his own honor. The only way he could make that sacrifice worthwhile was to do it before he resigned, thereby making it a public spectacle.

    • #3
  4. MarciN Member
    MarciN
    @MarciN

    This guy is in my prayers. I hope and pray something good comes out of this for him. He deserves it.

    There’s a great children’s story, a classic, Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, about a little kid who sees a way for the steam shovel driver to get the steam shovel out of a big pit. No one else in town can see the solution to the problem.

    That’s all I could think of when I heard Scheller’s video: “Why did you give up Bagram Air Base?” A simple question that no one has yet answered satisfactorily. Instead, everyone has taken a shot at the questioner.

    • #4
  5. cdor Member
    cdor
    @cdor

    MarciN (View Comment):

    This guy is in my prayers. I hope and pray something good comes out of this for him. He deserves it.

    There’s a great children’s story, a classic, Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, about a little kid who sees a way for the steam shovel driver to get the steam shovel out of a big pit. No one else in town could see the solution to the problem.

    That’s all I could think of when I heard Scheller’s video: “Why did you give up Bagram Air Base?” A simple question that no one has answered satisfactorily. Instead, everyone shot the questioner.

    So do you think, @marcin, that Scheller will get hired by CNN? 

    • #5
  6. Fritz Coolidge
    Fritz
    @Fritz

    If a Biden-appointed Secretary of the Navy is to decide what type of discharge he’ll receive, then I fear the long-term damage to the Lt. Col.’s future resulting from that final outcome.

    • #6
  7. Barfly Member
    Barfly
    @Barfly

    Percival (View Comment):

    Scheller did the crime knowing he’d do the time, but felt that his honor required it. I wonder if any of the superior officers to whom he “showed disrespect” can say as much?

    Showing them disrespect was wrong. They merited utter contempt. They still do.

    Scheller said 

    “I want to say this very strongly: I have been fighting for 17 years. I am willing to throw it all away to say to my senior leaders ‘I demand accountability.’”

    He challenged the weaklings we’ve installed in place of leaders to “throw their rank on the table” and say the truth out loud, then he showed them how to do it.

    Yes, the play soldiers of the left have earned contempt, and I obligingly despise them.

    • #7
  8. She Member
    She
    @She

    MarciN (View Comment):

    That’s all I could think of when I heard Scheller’s video: “Why did you give up Bagram Air Base?” A simple question that no one has yet answered satisfactorily. Instead, everyone has taken a shot at the questioner.

    Not quite everyone.  

    • #8
  9. Clifford A. Brown Member
    Clifford A. Brown
    @CliffordBrown

    Good on the military judge and LtCol Scheller. We need to set vengeance, retribution against the four stars, as a litmus test of every Republican primary candidate. No commitment, no call for vengeance and retribution, no votes.

    • #9
  10. Gwen Brown Lincoln
    Gwen Brown
    @Gwen Brown

    MarciN (View Comment):

    This guy is in my prayers. I hope and pray something good comes out of this for him. He deserves it.

    There’s a great children’s story, a classic, Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, about a little kid who sees a way for the steam shovel driver to get the steam shovel out of a big pit. No one else in town can see the solution to the problem.

    That’s all I could think of when I heard Scheller’s video: “Why did you give up Bagram Air Base?” A simple question that no one has yet answered satisfactorily. Instead, everyone has taken a shot at the questioner.

    Your link goes to something different. Our family knows ‘Mike Mulligan ‘  – that wonderful story is in ‘The Modern Story Book’ , published back in the late 1930s, both my husband and I had that book as children; and we were able to find a copy a few years ago which we still enjoy. (Second childhood?)

    • #10
  11. She Member
    She
    @She

    Fritz (View Comment):

    If a Biden-appointed Secretary of the Navy is to decide what type of discharge he’ll receive, then I fear the long-term damage to the Lt. Col.’s future resulting from that final outcome.

    I think those in the rarified heights of the USMC, who may be slightly less tone-deaf than their counterparts in other service branches, must have decided that no useful purpose was to be served by making Scheller either a martyr or an object lesson for those who would publicly criticize their chain of command.  I’m not sure they started out with that gentle goal in mind, given early leaks which appear to have come from inside the Corps, or the fact that his commanding officer sent the MPs to round him up and throw him in the brig in late September. (Both aspects of the case on the part of the USMC that were harshly criticized by the judge at Scheller’s court-martial.)

    That was when a few politicians got involved, and Scheller’s parents (who seem like very decent, normal people who love their son) started appearing on every Fox News Channel prime time show, every night.  I’m guessing that the public backlash from that precipitated a change in plan, and that it no longer seemed like such a good idea to throw the book at Scheller.  That seems to have paid off from the point of view of those who would like the Scheller story to go away, as there’s very little coverage (other than on Fox) of the rather light judicial sentence that Scheller received for his actions.

    We’ll see if the Secretary of the Navy is similarly inclined.  A particularly harsh ruling would, I think, bring the matter, and Afghanistan with it, back into the news.  And I don’t think anyone in DC wants that.

    Whatever the terms of Scheller’s discharge, I don’t think he has to worry about his future.  Speaking the truth when doing so endangers your career, and then (perhaps somewhat recklessly) escalating, and then stepping up and acknowledging that you violated the rules of your service and accepting the punishment, while still effectively standing your ground, is something that many, many people find admirable, if not heroic.  He may not be every employer’s cup of tea, but I don’t think he’ll have any difficulty moving on. And I hope he finds a worthwhile second career where he can put his considerable talents to some good use.

    Like @marcin, I pray for his success, and that he’s able to settle himself and put his life back together, that he’s not swept up and used by others for an agenda that’s not in his best interests, that he knows who his real friends are and that he sticks with them.  I wish him well.

    • #11
  12. MarciN Member
    MarciN
    @MarciN

    Gwen Brown (View Comment):

    MarciN (View Comment):

    This guy is in my prayers. I hope and pray something good comes out of this for him. He deserves it.

    There’s a great children’s story, a classic, Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, about a little kid who sees a way for the steam shovel driver to get the steam shovel out of a big pit. No one else in town can see the solution to the problem.

    That’s all I could think of when I heard Scheller’s video: “Why did you give up Bagram Air Base?” A simple question that no one has yet answered satisfactorily. Instead, everyone has taken a shot at the questioner.

    Your link goes to something different. Our family knows ‘Mike Mulligan ‘ – that wonderful story is in ‘The Modern Story Book’ , published back in the late 1930s, both my husband and I had that book as children; and we were able to find a copy a few years ago which we still enjoy. (Second childhood?)

    Thank you so much. I just fixed it. I used the other link in another comment I made earlier, for some reason I didn’t check that I got the right link. I fixed the link in this one too. :-)

    So sorry, everyone. :-)

    • #12
  13. FightinInPhilly Coolidge
    FightinInPhilly
    @FightinInPhilly

    I’m not sure where to exactly get a fact check, but my father (Col. USMC, Ret.) tells the story that George Marshall passed over hundreds of generals as he built up the US effort in World War II. Basically, anyone who had risen high in the ranks from 1930-1940 was worthless. The next president will likely have to do the same when building assembling the Joint Chiefs and the rest of the military leadership. God Bless Lt. Col Scheller.

    • #13
  14. Al Sparks Coolidge
    Al Sparks
    @AlSparks

    Clifford A. Brown (View Comment):

    Good on the military judge and LtCol Scheller. We need to set vengeance, retribution against the four stars, as a litmus test of every Republican primary candidate. No commitment, no call for vengeance and retribution, no votes.

    How?  A four star general is near the end of his career.  By the time of the next presidential election, most of the generals responsible for this debacle will have retired.  Mark Milley is scheduled to retire in October 2023.

    General Scott Miller who commanded U.S. forces in Afghanistan during the withdrawal is expected to retire soon, and presently holds no 4 star command.

    Also, I can think of better things to be a one issue voter about if I were to be one.

    • #14
  15. Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patriot) Member
    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patriot)
    @ArizonaPatriot

    FightinInPhilly (View Comment):

    I’m not sure where to exactly get a fact check, but my father (Col. USMC, Ret.) tells the story that George Marshall passed over hundreds of generals as he built up the US effort in World War II. Basically, anyone who had risen high in the ranks from 1930-1940 was worthless. The next president will likely have to do the same when building assembling the Joint Chiefs and the rest of the military leadership. God Bless Lt. Col Scheller.

    I think that there is some truth in what you say about the WWII commanders, though not everyone who had risen to high rank before 1940 was worthless.  Far from it.

    Here’s a short list: Marshall himself, MacArthur, and Hap Arnold.  They were pretty good, I think.

    On the Navy side, there were King, Leahy, Nimitz, Halsey, and Fletcher.  They were all pretty good, too.  I know, I know, Halsey shouldn’t have chased the Japanese decoy force at Leyte Gulf, but overall, he wasn’t worthless.

    • #15
  16. Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patriot) Member
    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patriot)
    @ArizonaPatriot

    I sympathize with Lt. Col. Scheller, and am happy to read that his punishment will be relatively light.  I hope that SecNav goes easy on him with the discharge.

    I must love to be hated, because I’m gonna write what you know that I’m gonna write.  I think that Scheller was wrong, not only due to his circumstances, but due to the substance of his opinion.  I do sympathize, because I think that he was dealing with the grief and remorse of the ultimate failure of the intervention in Afghanistan.

    The withdrawal was a success.  Our losses were limited to 13, as far as I could tell.  I recall all of the, well, hysteria back in August, here at Ricochet and elsewhere.  There was going to be a bloodbath of Americans left behind.  There were worries of Taiwan falling; or Afghanistan somehow attacking well, I could never quite tell who, Israel maybe; or Afghan terrorists sneaking across the southern border now that they had all of those new used weapons.

    None of it happened.  As far as I’ve been able to tell, there has not been a single American killed in Afghanistan since September 1.  If anyone has contrary information, please let me know.

    Here’s what I expect to happen.  Month after month will pass, and there will be nothing particularly bad that happens to Americans in Afghanistan.  Taiwan will not fall.  Nothing much will occur on the international scene.

    If something bad does happen, there will be no particular reason to relate it to Afghanistan.  While we were in Afghanistan, we saw the mess in Libya, the terrible civil war in Syria, the rise and fall of ISIS, the whole (thankfully brief) Muslim Brotherhood thing in Egypt.  Oh, and Russia fighting a brief war with Georgia in 2008 and seizing Crimea in 2014.

    It is possible that I will turn out to be incorrect about this.  I hope not, and you should hope not, too, no matter how annoyed you may be at me.  We don’t want bad things to happen to our countrymen, do we?

    But I doubt that I will turn out to be incorrect.  Months will pass, and the fallout from Afghanistan will be a nothingburger.  And occasionally, someone will probably post something about the Great Afghanistan Debacle of 2021, and I will point out, again, that all of the fears and dire predictions did not come to pass.  Maybe, eventually, folks will start to realize that this was a minor thing.

    I do expect that Afghans will sometimes do terrible things to other  Afghans.  I’m no expert on Afghan history, but it is my impression that they were doing this when Alexander the Great arrived, and until the British took over, and after the British left, and after the Russians invaded, and after the Russians left, and after we invaded.  They’ll probably remain true to form now that we have left.  Not my problem.

     

    • #16
  17. She Member
    She
    @She

    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patrio… (View Comment):
    I must love to be hated, because I’m gonna write what you know that I’m gonna write. 

    That’s an odd reason to write something.  That’s all I’ll say.

    • #17
  18. Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patriot) Member
    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patriot)
    @ArizonaPatriot

    I should add that I do not have much respect for some of the high military command, but not for anything relating to Afghanistan.  I think that they are wrong in their embrace of Wokeism, and in going along with the whole right-wing domestic terrorist narrative.  Oh, and the silly global warming stuff, too.

    I do hope that one of them is still a good guy.  I don’t think that I’ve seen him since his wedding back around 1991.  A 3-star general, Lt. Gen. Gregory Guillot, is currently the commander of the Ninth Air Force.  Greg is one year older than me, and his family moved into the house next door back around 1974, when we were around 7 or 8 years old.  We were neighbors and friends through the end of high school, though we didn’t see much of each other thereafter.

    Greg took command of the Ninth Air Force in 2020.  It looks like the command included Bagram.

    • #18
  19. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patrio… (View Comment):

    I sympathize with Lt. Col. Scheller, and am happy to read that his punishment will be relatively light. I hope that SecNav goes easy on him with the discharge.

    I must love to be hated, because I’m gonna write what you know that I’m gonna write. I think that Scheller was wrong, not only due to his circumstances, but due to the substance of his opinion. I do sympathize, because I think that he was dealing with the grief and remorse of the ultimate failure of the intervention in Afghanistan.

    The withdrawal was a success. Our losses were limited to 13, as far as I could tell.

    If our top military command believed that, they probably wouldn’t have handled Scheller the way they did. He would have been punished, to be sure, but there wouldn’t have been the leaks to the press, etc., that were criticized by the judge.

    • #19
  20. Captain French Moderator
    Captain French
    @AlFrench

    LtCol Schiller won’t be getting a bad conduct or dishonorable discharge. Those can be awarded only by court martial. The character of a discharge is governed by regulations, so SECNAV won’t have unfettered discretion.

    • #20
  21. CarolJoy, Not So Easy To Kill Coolidge
    CarolJoy, Not So Easy To Kill
    @CarolJoy

    She you state: “All in all, an interesting conclusion to the case, in which no-one involved got off scot-free.”

    Sad to think that behind the scenes, it was our national security – betrayed by those the Lt Colonel complained of – that took the greatest hits.

    And, come to think of it, some of the people Scheller complained of, like Gen Milley, did get off scot free.

    • #21
  22. Al Sparks Coolidge
    Al Sparks
    @AlSparks

    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patrio… (View Comment):

    FightinInPhilly (View Comment):

    I’m not sure where to exactly get a fact check, but my father (Col. USMC, Ret.) tells the story that George Marshall passed over hundreds of generals as he built up the US effort in World War II. Basically, anyone who had risen high in the ranks from 1930-1940 was worthless. The next president will likely have to do the same when building assembling the Joint Chiefs and the rest of the military leadership. God Bless Lt. Col Scheller.

    I think that there is some truth in what you say about the WWII commanders, though not everyone who had risen to high rank before 1940 was worthless. Far from it.

    Here’s a short list: Marshall himself, MacArthur, and Hap Arnold. They were pretty good, I think.

    On the Navy side, there were King, Leahy, Nimitz, Halsey, and Fletcher. They were all pretty good, too. I know, I know, Halsey shouldn’t have chased the Japanese decoy force at Leyte Gulf, but overall, he wasn’t worthless.

    Marshall did pass over, indeed got rid of, older generals.  But the army he presided over was much different than today’s military.  Officers in today’s military are automatically cashiered if they are turned down for promotion twice in a row.  That wasn’t the case pre-WWII.

    The examples given above of MacArthur, and Hap Arnold are curious.  Marshall had little influence over them.  In the case of MacArthur, he had already retired, but was called back to active service, really by the president, because he was already in the Philipines as the head of their army.

    In the case of Hap Arnold, he was head of the Army Air Corps, precursor to today’s U.S. Air Force, and the Army Air Corps already had an independence from the Army Chief of Staff, only technically reporting to the Chief of Staff.

    By the way, one notable exception Marshall made regarding older officers making general under his tenure was George Patton.

    The problem today’s military has is rank inflation and a culture that doesn’t tolerate mistakes.  I mentioned today’s up or out policy, and really, if you miss one promotion, your chances of getting promoted on the second try are almost nil.

    • #22
  23. Al Sparks Coolidge
    Al Sparks
    @AlSparks

    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patrio… (View Comment):
    The withdrawal was a success.  Our losses were limited to 13, as far as I could tell.  I recall all of the, well, hysteria back in August, here at Ricochet and elsewhere.  There was going to be a bloodbath of Americans left behind.  There were worries of Taiwan falling; or Afghanistan somehow attacking well, I could never quite tell who, Israel maybe; or Afghan terrorists sneaking across the southern border now that they had all of those new used weapons.

    It wasn’t a success.  Your argument that it isn’t as bad as it seemed at the time is plausible.  But it did result in a hit to American prestige.  I also suspect that the Taliban are getting under the table payments from the United States to keep those American “hostages” from being mistreated.  So they’re being left alone?

    The real test is if they are being allowed out of the country.  As for your predictions about Taiwan, again it’s plausible.  We’ll see.

    • #23
  24. She Member
    She
    @She

    CarolJoy, Not So Easy To Kill (View Comment):

    She you state: “All in all, an interesting conclusion to the case, in which no-one involved got off scot-free.”

    Sad to think that behind the scenes, it was our national security – betrayed by those the Lt Colonel complained of – that took the greatest hits.

    And, come to think of it, some of the people Scheller complained of, like Gen Milley, did get off scot free.

    We agree about that,  Carol. I was referring to the judge‘s ruling, and his harsh  words for the prosecution at the same time as he sentenced LtCol Scheller. Milley and his ilk are the people I’m speaking about in the next sentence of the OP. They are the ones who skated. 

    • #24
  25. She Member
    She
    @She

    The Daily Mail (of all things) has the most comprehensive coverage of this I’ve seen.  It includes, in full, Scheller’s statement to the court-martial.  It’s very long (and comes with a few CoC bolded emendations), but here it is:

    9/11 enraged and pained me like all Americans. But unlike many of my peers, the events of 9/11 aren’t what compelled me to join the military. For me, I found myself working as an accountant in a cubical post college. From my cubical one day in 2004, I was able to watch the Marines moving through the city of Fallujah on the news. At the center of this violent attack, was the unit V18. Watching those Marines filled me with awe, respect, and love. I knew how much I loved America, and I was mad at myself for not making more sacrifices for the country. I called the Marine Corps that day and began my journey.

    After 17 years, I want to express how grateful I am for everything the Marine Corps did to mold me into the man I am. Despite the recent events, and everything that has been discussed today I owe the Marine Corps a lot.

    The Marine Corps for me was never supposed to be a career. But I’ve stayed as long as I have for two reasons:

    1. Love for the Marines and

    2. The opportunity to make a difference on the battlefield as a leader.

    I truly believe America is the greatest country in the world.

    I truly believe the American military is the greatest military in the world.

    I truly believe the Marine Corps has the best talent of all the military services.

    But I also truly believe fundamental change needs to occur in the military. I have observed that the General officers are unable or unwilling to hold themselves accountable.

    I have always loved the Marines. But as my recent public comments illustrate, I have started questioning the long-standing system of the Marine Corps, and for that matter, the military as a whole.

    Prior to the withdrawal of Afghanistan, I was reflecting on the often-told stories about the previous Commandants Wilson and Barrow. Those two Commandants led the USMC after the failures in Vietnam. The narrative told today is that Commandants Wilson and Barrow ‘fixed the service’ with their generational shift. They fixed the Service by raising the standards on the junior enlisted Marine. Said another way, the junior enlisted Marines weren’t capable of winning the Vietnam war, or the next war, so the Generals needed to fix the Service.

    I was thinking about the parallels of Vietnam and Afghanistan as I read General Berger’s letter to the Force dated 18 August. This letter in my opinion perfectly illustrates senior military leader’s inability to see the true pain in Service members following a failed war effort. General Berger told Service members their sacrifices were worth it without offering any connection back to a bigger purpose. He concluded the letter with how Service members should go seek counseling. At no point did he acknowledge any failures of the leadership.

    A week after reading his statement, I was sitting in my office on August 26th, and I was told that 13 service members had been killed and many more injured in an SVEST attack. I also knew the majority of the casualties were from V18… my first unit. My mind was immediately taken back to my friend Dave Borden, who was hit with an SVEST when we served in Ramadi together with V18. It was the same situation playing out again. I thought about all the time I spent with Dave in Walter Reed, and in the half-way treatment house months later. I thought about LCpl Gluff who was killed in that SVEST attack next to Dave. And at the same time as these thoughts ran through my mind, I was receiving pictures from a friend on my phone from Marines who were involved in the recent Abby Gate Afghanistan SVEST incident.

    In that moment I had clarity. I realized the military was continuing to make the same mistakes because senior leaders continued to diagnose the wrong problem. I concluded that our senior leaders were either unable or unwilling to have an honest discussion about our failures in a public forum that would necessitate REAL change. I also decided that quietly addressing these concerns within the chain of command would be ineffective. I knew my complaints would never be heard by the Commandant, the SECDEF, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, or the American people if I went through the proper channels. Reference the charges I tried to prefer against General McKenzie. It is a perfect example of how going through the system doesn’t work.

    In the first video I connected the failed Afghan withdraw, the attacks on V18, and General Berger’s letter to the force. I stated, ‘The reason people are so upset right now is NOT because of the Marine on the battlefield. That Service member has always rose to the occasion and done extraordinary things. The reason people are so upset right now is because their senior leaders let them down, and none of them are raising their hands and taking accountability.’ I ended by saying, ‘I’ve been fighting for 17 years and I’m willing to throw it all away to say to my senior leaders… I demand accountability.’

    That Thursday night, as the video started to go viral, I stated on my LinkedIn page that I did not plan to resign despite all the demands for my resignation. At that time, that is how I felt. I wanted to remain in the Marine Corps.

    When I came into work the next morning, on August 27th, the first person I spoke to was Col Emmel. He asked what I was trying to achieve with the video. He told me he didn’t think I would be able to affect any real change. He then told me that morning that I would NOT be relieved immediately. He told me to go home for the weekend and an investigation would take place, and that following the investigation the command would decide if it warranted my relief and/or follow-on administrative action.

    When Col Emmel left my office, my Battalion Executive Officer came in so we could conduct a turnover. He was going to run the Battalion in my absence. He said, ‘I don’t need anything from you sir. I just want you to know how much I respect you, and how political and [CoC] up the Marine Corps has gotten. That’s why a lot of guys are getting out. That’s why our old Gunner got out. In fact, I first heard about your video when our old Gunner called me this morning. He said, your new boss just posted a video that is all truth. I’m sure he’s going down, but someone needed to have the courage to say it. Please tell him how proud we all are of him.’ My Battalion Executive Officer then went on to say, ‘We all know it’s political. You know the joint chiefs who signed a letter condemning the January 6th attacks… how political was that? I’m not saying I condone the January 6th attacks, but I am saying for all the joint chiefs to sign a letter on that topic, but not to condemn any of the other recent riots that have caused more damage and deaths is purely political.’ To which I responded… ‘Yes, those idiots on January 6th were unorganized and unintelligent. If ever there was a force that used deliberate thought, the outcome could be much worse.’

    At no time did I ever advocate for the violent overthrow of the government. I was led into the conversation of the January 6th attacks by someone I trusted, and then my words were twisted. Furthermore, the investigating officer then took that statement and led every witness he interviewed with questions about my involvement in the January 6th attacks. This in my perception, was as an attempt by the Marine Corps to paint me into something I’m not. The Marine Corps, despite their best efforts, was not able to find any evidence of insurrection. If the Marine Corps could have charged me with insurrection… they would have.

    Then later that same Friday the 27th, while I was back at my house, without explanation, Col Emmel called me back into work, even though he told me to take the weekend off. When I came back into work, he relieved me for cause. He never explained why he did a 180, and I didn’t ask. I’m not sure if it was my Battalion Executive Officer’s comments, or a decision made above Col Emmel. But at the time, not even understanding what my Battalion Executive Officer had said, I agreed that the relief was best for the Marine Corps. And I wanted, and still want, what was best for the Marine Corps. When I left work, I made a post stating that I had been relieved, ‘and that my command was doing exactly what I would have done.’ After publicly announcing my relief, at that time, I still planned on allowing the investigation to run its course, and to remain in the Marine Corps without further statements.

    But after my relief, when I got home and back on my social media, I saw a post from my old commanding officer Colonel Hobbs. He commented below my statement on LinkedIn that I didn’t plan to resign and stated, ‘If Stuart Scheller were honorable, he would resign.’ This comment devastated me. He didn’t call me. He didn’t text me. He didn’t email me. Someone who I even stated in my second video, ‘That I loved like a father.’ He demonstrated that he didn’t care about me at all. And even though he’s retired, Colonel Hobbs is still very active in the Marine Corps. In fact, he called after my second video and left me a voicemail stating that he and General Neller were discussing my situation. That’s the influence Col Hobbs still has.

    After reading his comment following my relief, my thoughts went from disappointment to anger. It was the first time I started thinking about resigning. I started thinking, if my call for accountability can result in me being fired and investigated in 24 hours, and my greatest mentor in the Marine Corps can immediately turn on me without any empathy for me as a human being, maybe my senior leaders don’t care about me at all. Maybe, this is not an organization that I want to be a part of. This led me to my second post on Friday the 27th, where I stated, ‘Last night when I posted the video I immediately had multiple Marines call and ask me to take down the post. ‘We all agree with you Stu, but nothing will change, and it will come at a huge personal cost to you.’ Now that I’ve had time to process… I’ll offer this… we can’t ALL be wrong. If you all agree… then step up. They only have the power because we allow it. What if we all demanded accountability? Every generation needs a revolution.’

    This post is where the Marine Corps and I started parting ways dramatically. My calls for revolution were always about changing the system. A system that centralizes power and fails to hold senior leaders accountable. A system that will immediately turn on you if you speak out.

    Col Emmel called me that Friday night and made it very clear that I was heading towards legal action with the most recent post and reminded me again of the social media policy.

    So I took Saturday to contemplate my situation. In that day I came to the conclusion that the Marine Corps didn’t really care about me, and that best case, I would be hidden in an office for three years as a failure. But that most likely I was heading towards a BOI for separation based on my use of the word revolution. This situation led me into the second video that I posted on Sunday August 29th. The second video was me declaring that I felt like the General Officers and leaders of the military didn’t understand or care. In the video I stated my intention to resign and give up my retirement. I also stated, ‘I want to be clear that I love the Marine Corps.’ And then I went on to state, ‘Follow me and we will bring the whole [CoC] system down.’ If I could go back, I would have chosen different words. But at no time was that a call to violence. I was stating that the system is broken and needs to be rebuilt. I still feel this is the case. I still feel fundamental change is required. I still feel a revolution, or rebuilding the broken system is the only way to fix the shortfalls if senior leaders are unable or unwilling to fix it themselves.

    Following the post of the second video, that Sunday afternoon my CO texted me to call him. Immediately after he texted me, the SOI XO called me. I answered his call and spoke to him for over ten minutes. He obviously thought I was suicidal, which I knew I wasn’t. He kept stating that he would come meet me, and I kept stating that it wasn’t necessary. We repeated the same thing over and over to each other until finally I got frustrated and said, ‘That’s enough. I answered your call out of professional courtesy. I am not suicidal. And I’m not going to continue having this conversation.’ And then the phone call ended. I didn’t call Col Emmel back because I had just spoken to his XO for a great length of time, and I assumed that was sufficient.

    I kept my phone on for the rest of the day and no one called me until later that night. Two Marines I know, Major Cummings and LtCol Helminski texted me that NCIS arrived at their houses respectively. Both told me NCIS was looking for me. To which I responded, ‘Why didn’t they just call me and ask where I was?’ They didn’t know. So I told both of them the same thing, ‘I’m fine, and I can talk to NCIS tomorrow morning at 08:00 when I show up to work. I am not suicidal.’ Then I saw a statement released by the Marine Corps public affairs office that stated, ‘the Marine Corps is trying to locate LtCol Scheller to ensure his safety and the safety of those around him.’ I was furious about this statement. I assumed if the Marine Corps was REALLY trying to locate me, that they would have been smart enough to call me. The SOI XO was able to reach me. My peers were able to reach me. This seemed like an obvious attempt from the Marine Corps to paint me as suicidal. Which was another indicator to me that the system didn’t really care about me, but only wanted to protect itself. If they really thought I was suicidal… why not call me… unless they were actually hoping I would commit suicide.

    When I went into work the next morning the Marine Corps narrative of my unstable mental health continued to be discussed. My CO told me he wanted me to volunteer for a mental evaluation. I told him that wasn’t necessary. So he ordered me to get a mental health evaluation. I did, and they determined what I knew all along, which I wasn’t mentally unstable, just very angry at what I perceived to be consistent betrayal.

    The mental health angle is frustrating for many reasons. The Marine Corps never ordered me to get a mental health evaluation when I missed the birth of my first child while deployed to Afghanistan. The Marine Corps never ordered me to get a mental health evaluation when I missed the funerals of all three of my grandparents while on different deployments. The Marine Corps only cared about my mental health once I publicly challenged the leadership.

    After I was released from the hospital, I felt like all bets were off. I felt like the Marine Corps was out to get me, and I didn’t feel like a single officer or previous peer had my back. Just reference the comments about me in the investigation. They called me, ‘narcissistic, egotistical, entitled, too relaxed, abusive, bi-polar, poor selection to battalion command, treats people like [CoC], embellished combat record, smirks unnecessarily, supports January 6th attacks, should go to jail, etc.’ No one said anything positive. Not one. While at this time I hadn’t actually read the investigation, I could feel their contempt in every conversation.

    Also, at this time my family was out of state and my marriage was falling apart. All I wanted to do was to travel up to my wife and try to make amends. I asked Col Emmel for leave, but he wouldn’t allow it until all my medial and out-processing administration was done. He said my number one priority should be preparing to exit the Marine Corps, and all other things could wait. So I had to continue to come into work every day, which in my opinion, was never about my best interest.

    The following day, on Tuesday, August 31st, I submitted my resignation letter because I knew the divide between the Marine Corps and myself was too deep for repair.

    The next day, Wednesday September 1st, I made four posts that I later deleted. Two were directly to General Berger; in one post I stated that I heard General Burger was trying to court martial me. I then went on to comment about his current initiative to revoke the authority of Battalion Commander’s to manage their unit’s social media. To me this is an example of the system centralizing control. In a second post to General Berger, I thanked him for addressing the need to discuss the withdraw of Afghanistan. A third post I made that day was in response to the attack on my small business. I spoke to my business partner who told me MCCS was potentially pulling my product, The Perfect Ribbon, off the shelves of the Marine Corps exchanges because of my actions. Again, this was just another example of how I thought the Marine Corps was unlawfully attacking me. Again I thought, why would they do that if they actually cared about me? My fourth post that day was to my wife. She wasn’t answering my phone calls. I wasn’t able to take leave, and even though I knew she had taken down her social media, I knew my plea to her would be forwarded. But in hindsight, I shouldn’t have made any of those posts. So I ended up deleting all four posts from that Wednesday. I concluded that I was under duress and that the posts didn’t accurately reflect my message. I also deeply regret the way I handled what should have been a private conversation with my wife.

    But I never went back and deleted my messages demanding accountability, or how I thought the system was failing. I made another post on Thursday 2 September clarifying my position and demand for accountability. I very clearly stated that ‘I planned to bring the whole system down… in a constitutional manner with one loud voice.’

    At this point, I felt the world was against me, and all I could see was the hypocrisy of the system. Everything I thought about frustrated me. So I made another post on Labor Day that quoted the right in the Declaration of Independence for the people to throw off the old form of government if it isn’t serving the interests of the people. I also illustrated my frustration with General officers who take jobs with high paying government contractors following their retirement. This seems highly unethical to me and is another symptom of our inability to hold senior leaders accountable. For example, the current Secretary of Defense got a high paying job with Raytheon to be on the board of directors following his military retirement, which in itself is unethical. But then he was selected to become the Secretary of Defense. The ethical issues with this conflict of interest are obvious to me.

    Later that week, on Friday September 10th, I published a third video titled United WE stand. In this video I was trying to communicate my emotional process. I was trying to show all the people who kept calling me crazy that I was just a normal guy, like all other Service members asked to kill people in the last 20 years. I wanted to normalize the psychological impact on service members after a failed war. I wanted other Service Members to see that it’s normal to get mad. And that just because you’re mad, doesn’t mean you’re bi-polar or have a mental illness. That it’s normal to cry. That it’s normal to question why your government asked you to commit violence. That it’s normal to demand accountability from the same senior leaders who asked you to commit the violence. At no time in that video did I state I was going to use violence to hold my senior leaders accountable. But again, that is how the message was spun. I posted the video to demonstrate how these emotions are normal, but somehow I was painted as even crazier than before. Everyone was telling me that I was having a mental break down.

    Following this video my lawyer was trying to make a deal.

    But at the time, I felt like my honor and reputation were at stake. I felt the Marine Corps was challenging me without addressing my demands for accountability… AT ALL. I felt like at that point, if I had taken any agreed upon deal, I would always have been painted as the stereotypical crazy veteran. I felt like all my very valid points would have been forgotten.

    And to be clear, I am a command selected Battalion Commander. Can you imagine a LCpl demanding accountability for rape or any other valid complaint? How do you think the command would treat those Marines? Do you think the command would be more sympathetic to them than how they have treated me? This whole process, in my opinion, should be a case study on how the system can turn on someone who speaks out. I truly hope going forward that Marine Corps leaders can better tolerate challenges to the system.

    I ended up deciding to post a fourth video, on Thursday September 16th, to ensure my request for accountability was not forgotten. I posted the video in my uniform, because unlike my previous two videos, I was very controlled and deliberate in the fourth video. In the fourth video, I was speaking directly to the General officers. I also stated my intention to prefer legal charges against General McKenzie so that my command, who was trying to hold me accountable, would also be forced to take a formal position on the charges I levied against General McKenzie. But up to this point, they have denied me this right.

    After I posted the fourth video, my command finally grew tired of reminding me about the social media policy and issued me the gag order. To be clear, I never stated that I would stop posting. I only signed and acknowledge that Col Emmel gave me a gag order. After signing, I remained silent for the rest of the week on social media. During that week I was fighting four sperate legal battles with four different groups of lawyers. My wife handed me a separation agreement, my business partner initiated a process to buy me out of the company since my name hurt the brand, I was trying unsuccessfully to prefer legal action against General McKenzie, and I was also trying to defend myself against the legal actions being brought towards me by the command. It was a tough week for me personally and professionally.

    Then that weekend, on Saturday, September 25th, I deliberately made three posts that violated the gag order. I did so willingly.

    I knew if I said true things that were hard to hear, my command would likely overreact and send me to jail. I felt this overreaction would ultimately bring coverage to my situation and force the General officers to answer tough questions about the hypocrisy of our situations.

    But even though I anticipated my command would send me to jail, when I went into work on Monday, I was very disturbed that Col Emmel stated on the confinement order that I was a flight risk. Up to that point, I knew Col Emmel was very upset with me, but I didn’t take it personally. I also sympathized with his responsibility to hold the party line. But when he stated formally that I was a flight risk with absolutely no evidence of this, I felt like he lied to silence and punish me. The truth is that I came into work every day and had responded to every request even after he refused to let me take leave. The only time I failed to communicate with him was the one text he sent me after my second video, which again, I felt was appropriately addressed after I spoke to his XO for ten minutes. Yet still somehow, he listed on a formal document that I was a flight risk to justify my confinement.

    While in the brig I again tried to submit a resignation in lieu of trial, but my command rejected it. They wanted a conviction of guilt. Thus, I obviously signed a deal to plead guilty to a litany of charges at special court martial, which brings us to today. But the attacks from the Marine Corps continued even after my release. Following my release, the Marine Corps leaked confidential documents to the senior pentagon journalist for Task and Purpose. Of note, the Marine Corps placed my medical records in the investigation, and then leaked these documents to Task and Purpose. For them to leak my medical records is truly heartbreaking. Furthermore, had I leaked something to the media, I would have gone back to jail. But no one in the Marine Corps will be held accountable for the leaked documents. In the article ran by Task and Purpose, I was painted as a violent extremist, Fascist, and the journalist even made a connection to Hitler. Obviously, you can understand that I was very angry following the article. After everything I’ve been through, I feel it’s reasonable to conclude that the Marine Corps and Task and Purpose were working together in an effort to smear my name. I also feel that it’s possible the Marine Corps was trying to bait me into posting again.

    This is not the America I know. This is not the America that I have fought so hard to defend the last 17 years.

    In summary, I was never charged with a false official statement. Because everything I have said is true. If the Marine Corps could have charged me with, they would have. My statements all center around the fact that I do not believe General Officers are held to the same standards as junior leaders. I also believe, that similar to post Vietnam, the Marine Corps leadership is trying to spin the narrative about our failures on the junior enlisted without taking a hard look at themselves. I also believe that once I spoke out, the Marine Corps wholistically took every opportunity to attack me, and never actually cared about my well-being.

    But it’s hard for the Marine Corps to defeat someone who refuses to quit. Going forward, I am still demanding accountability from my senior General officers. Since this endeavor began, not a single General officer has accepted accountability. Not a single General officer has contacted me directly in any forum to deescalate the situation. Since this endeavor began, I have acknowledged that I should be held accountable for my actions. I am standing here today pleading guilty. This is me accepting accountability. But it deeply pains me that my senior leaders are incapable of being as courageous.

    Without accountability from our senior leaders, the system cannot evolve, and the military will ultimately keep repeating the same mistakes in the future. It doesn’t matter if a SSgt squad leader is highly efficient in distributed operations if the General officers have relegated themselves to ‘yes sir’ responses. We need senior leaders who possess the morale courage to push back when something doesn’t make sense.

    Furthermore, I understand that my process of criticism was unorothodoxed and not within official Marine Corps channels. I essentially requested mast in a very public setting. I acknowledge that it was potentially damaging to the Marine Corps’ reputation. But I felt the conversation and need for change outweighed the potential negative bad press. I did what I did because I thought it was in the best long-term interest of the Marine Corps. I have always wanted to make the Marine Corps better. Not damage the Marine Corps. I acknowledge that my actions placed the Marine Corps in a position where they were forced to respond and couldn’t quietly hide behind closed doors.

    My actions were very public, and at times, very emotional. But I think the emotional rollercoaster that I went through, is what every service member in the country goes through. The only difference is that my experience was very public. And unlike the 22 Service Members a day who kill themselves, I decided a long time ago that I will never be broken. No matter the struggle… I will prevail stronger. Post Traumatic Growth. But even with that mindset, that doesn’t mean I don’t experience pain. That doesn’t mean I don’t experience depression. That doesn’t mean I don’t take time to cry.

    If the leaders of the military actually cared about service members, and their sacrifices, all the current and previous senior leaders would engage in public discussions about the shortfalls in their decision making. Senior leaders accepting accountability would heal more service members than any other initiative. The junior service members deserve that from their leadership.

    I believe the General officers have demonstrated that they are unable or unwilling to hold themselves accountable. As a result, I believe fundamental change needs to occur in the military.

    I am being held accountable for my actions. The General officers should be held accountable for their failures.

    Thank You

    • #25
  26. Percival Thatcher
    Percival
    @Percival

    She (View Comment):
    The Daily Mail (of all things) has the most comprehensive coverage of this I’ve seen.  It includes, in full, Scheller’s statement to the court-martial.  It’s very long (and comes with a few CoC bolded emendations), but here it is:

    That fact alone rubbishes our “free and impartial” press.

    • #26
  27. EHerring Coolidge
    EHerring
    @EHerring

    Jerry Giordano (Arizona Patrio… (View Comment):

    I should add that I do not have much respect for some of the high military command, but not for anything relating to Afghanistan. I think that they are wrong in their embrace of Wokeism, and in going along with the whole right-wing domestic terrorist narrative. Oh, and the silly global warming stuff, too.

    I do hope that one of them is still a good guy. I don’t think that I’ve seen him since his wedding back around 1991. A 3-star general, Lt. Gen. Gregory Guillot, is currently the commander of the Ninth Air Force. Greg is one year older than me, and his family moved into the house next door back around 1974, when we were around 7 or 8 years old. We were neighbors and friends through the end of high school, though we didn’t see much of each other thereafter.

    Greg took command of the Ninth Air Force in 2020. It looks like the command included Bagram.

    9th AF commands CENTCOM. He has the same job Horner had.

    • #27
  28. EHerring Coolidge
    EHerring
    @EHerring

    Captain French (View Comment):

    LtCol Schiller won’t be getting a bad conduct or dishonorable discharge. Those can be awarded only by court martial. The character of a discharge is governed by regulations, so SECNAV won’t have unfettered discretion.

    Agree. You don’t give a dishonorable discharge for a LOR.

    • #28
  29. She Member
    She
    @She

    EHerring (View Comment):

    Captain French (View Comment):

    LtCol Schiller won’t be getting a bad conduct or dishonorable discharge. Those can be awarded only by court martial. The character of a discharge is governed by regulations, so SECNAV won’t have unfettered discretion.

    Agree. You don’t give a dishonorable discharge for a LOR.

    Good to know.  Thanks, @eherring and @alfrench.

    • #29
  30. MarciN Member
    MarciN
    @MarciN

    He’s been through hell. Those mental health shenanigans to imply that he was unstable and suicidal: I am so glad he had the presence of mind to not get sucked in by the play acted concern for his state of mind. 

    His thinking is crystal clear. 

    I think people his age will understand everything he is saying, and I think it will do enormous good going forward. 

    Locally, I’ve seen frustrated people yell Stop! or Go! from time to time. :-) Everyone around them recoils in pretend fear and horror, and then they criticize and, worse, make fun of the instigator. But then a weird thing happens: little by little, all the changes the instigator said needed to happen happen. It’s almost as if the people were listening and understanding the entire time the instigator was calling for change. They just never had the decency to give credit to the original instigator who had the courage to stand up and took a public beating for doing so.  

    • #30
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