Posts Tagged ‘Travis Bishop’

Killeen: Under the Hood Update, April, 2010

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

April 2010

March was a month of ups and downs for Under the Hood regulars and supporters. While we are excited that Travis Bishop was released early, we are very concerned for Eric Jasinski who was sentenced to 30 days in Bell County Jail.

Travis Bishop was released early on March 25, 2010 from the Fort Lewis Brig. Bishop was originally sentenced to 12 months in prison during his court-martial at Fort Hood, for refusing to deploy to Afghanistan for reasons of conscience.  Bishop served a total of seven months and 12 days of confinement after a successful clemency application to the Commanding General at Fort Hood and receiving extra time off for good behavior.  A celebration of his release was held at Coffee Strong in Lakewood, Washington on Sunday March 28th.  He also plans to come back to Killeen to visit his friends and supporters at Under the Hood Café where additional celebrations will be held.  News of Bishop’s release appeared in newspapers all over Texas, including Fort Worth, Houston, Beaumont, Corpus Christi, Midland, Baytown, Waco, Temple, Killeen, San Antonio and Austin.      On

March 30, 2010, Spc. Eric Jasinski was sentenced to 30 days confinement in the Bell County Jail. With good behavior, we anticipate that Eric will be out in 27 days.  In the meantime, family and friends are concerned for Eric’s well-being while jailed.  Currently under treatment for PTSD, Jasinski’s confinement could interfere with his ability to receive his prescribed medications.  James Branum, Eric’s attorney, is awaiting a reply for request to reduce his sentence.  According to Branum, “He was seeing a psychiatrist for his condition and prescribed Zoloft for depression and Trazadone to get to sleep, and they handed him his gun and told him to go back to Iraq.”     Eric’s supporters held a vigil on the evening of March 30th outside of the East Gate.  View some of our pictures on Facebook by clicking here.     Additional vigils are being held every Saturday at the Bell County Jail Annex, 113 West Central Avenue, Belton, Texas, from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m.  Vigils are currently scheduled for April 10th, 17th and 24th.

Your continued support helps us to provide much needed support to soldiers and veterans. The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Café and Outreach Center.  FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax exempt status. Donations may be treated as tax-deductible. We are especially grateful to our donors who make monthly contributions.  Whether you can commit to a monthly donation, or just a one-time donation, everything helps.

Under the Hood posters and coffee available soon! Thanks to the artistic skills of Gregory Truett Smith and Mahesh Brown, UtH has two brand new posters.  These posters will be available at the house parties in May, and will soon be available on our website for purchase.  You can help support Under the Hood and own a piece of history by purchasing one or both of these beautiful posters.   Under the Hood Café will soon have organic fair trade coffee available for purchase on our website.  If you buy coffee regularly, consider buying your coffee through Under the Hood so that your dollars can provide additional support to soldiers and veterans seeking the services of UtH.

Join us at one of our house parties in May! Lee and Hardy Loe have offered their beautiful new, environmentally responsible home for a house party to help raise funds to keep Under the Hood’s doors open.  Join us in Houston on Friday May 7th, starting at 6 p.m. at 1844 Kipling Street.  Hear the stories of active duty soldiers and veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, with special guest Cynthia Thomas, military wife and manager of Under the Hood Café. A special short video and multi-media presentation will be shown.  Snacks, beer, wine and non-alcoholic beverages will be served. $10 donation suggested at the door.  You can RSVP to this event by visiting our Facebook invite.   We hope to see you there.    If you can’t join us in Houston or you just can’t get enough of us, please join us at the beautiful home of Jennifer and Walter Long on May 15th in South Austin.  Many of the details are still being worked out, but we anticipate a great evening of music, food, and inspiring stories.  More information will be provided in the May newsletter, so please stay tuned.     For more information about either of these events, please feel free to contact Jim Turpin, Fundraising Committee, by e-mail or you can call him at 512-965-3726.    Under the Hood Update is now on Facebook. Become a fan! You can find archived issues and connect with other fans of Under the Hood.  Visit our Facebook page by clicking here.

P.O. Box 16174 | Austin, TX 78761-6174 US

Killeen: Under the Hood Update, March, 2010

Saturday, March 13th, 2010
March 2010
UTH in the Snow

Under the Hood has now been open for one year and so much has happened in that time! When our doors first opened, Under the Hood was a pretty quiet place–but not anymore.  A steady stream of active-duty soldiers now consider Under the Hood their “home away from home”.  Cindy Thomas, manager of Under the Hood Cafe, recently commented that  the “boys” have a hard time now taking a quick nap on one of their many couches because of all of the lively conversation going on there every day.

We mentioned in our last issue that Travis Bishop is being released early. We anticipate that he will be released from prison in late March.  Soon after Travis’s release, hopefully in April, he plans to return to Killeen to work with Under the Hood.  In a recent letter, he stated “I owe you and everyone else so much for everything you’ve done for me.  I can’t wait to see all you guys again”.   He goes on to say, “I had such faith in everyone throughout my time here, and everyone pulled through for me, in a big way.  So now, I will do the same for all the people who have faith in me.  I will remain outspoken in my views and opinions.”  We are excited to have Travis back at Under the Hood and are planning many activities around his return. See the bottom of this newsletter for upcoming activities.
Fort Hood Support Network (Under the Hood) has recently received a $3000 grant award from RESIST, Inc, a national progressive foundation located in Somerville, Massachusetts.
“We are very excited to receive this grant.” states Alice Embree, board member of Under the Hood.  RESIST began in 1967 in support of draft resistance and in opposition to the Vietnam War. As the funder of first resort for hundreds of organizations, RESIST’s small but timely grants and loans are made to grassroots groups engaged in activist organizing and educational work for social change. You can contact RESIST at 259 Elm Street, Somerville, MA  02144, phone # 617.623.5110 or
visit their website at www.resistinc.org.

While this grant will go a long way in helping to keep our doors open, we continue to need your support. The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Café and Outreach Center. FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax exempt status. Donations may be treated as tax-deductible. We are especially grateful to our donors who make monthly contributions. Whether you can commit to a monthly donation, or just a one-time donation, everything helps.
UTH poster given!

Under the Hood has a new poster image! We have been given a piece of graphic art specifically designed for us by Gregory Truett Smith of Splendid Rocket Studios.  Greg was contacted about doing a poster design for Under the Hood Cafe this past December.  Greg admits that he hadn’t thought much about how the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan might be affecting people who had enlisted in the military, but the topic intrigued him and he wanted to learn more.  After several meetings with Jim Turpin, fundraising committee member with Under the Hood, Greg started to develop a vision and soon an image was created.  Greg’s imagery is very powerful and soon supporters will be able to purchase posters and t-shirts with this new image.  In the next couple of weeks we hope to have a digital image ready to post to our website, so keep an eye out for it.  Greg says that this is only the beginning.  He has discovered a new passion in supporting Under the Hood and is already thinking about ideas for another poster!
We have a lot of activities planned in the upcoming months. We hope that you can join us. In March, we are having a weekly movie night.  In April we are planning a peace and social justice poetry slam, and in May we are planning house parties in Houston and Austin.  For more information about these and other planned events, you can contact us at [email protected] or visit our website at www.underthehoodcafe.org.
Under the Hood Update is now on Facebook. Become a fan!  You can find archived issues and connect with other fans of Under the Hood

Under the Hood 2009 highlights–excerpts from Under the Hood Update

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Under The Hood
5-10 p.m., everyday
17 S. College Street
Killeen, Texas
(254) 449-8811, http://www.underthehoodcafe.org/

In the spirit of the Oleo Strut, Under The Hood is a place for soldiers to gather, relax and speak freely about the wars and the military. Support services for soldiers include referrals for counseling, legal advice and information on GI rights.

Under The Hood needs your donations and support!

Our community was deeply affected by the November 5th tragedy.

Our heartfelt condolences go to the families of those who lost their lives and to the wounded. In the aftermath of the November 5th tragedy at Fort Hood, the coffeehouse was besieged with media attention.  Under the Hood provided an independent voice on the inadequate care of soldiers under stress and gave an antiwar perspective to U.S. and foreign media – both print and television.  Under the Hood was featured on NBC Nightly News, The New York Times, Al Jazeera, The Observer (UK), The Washington Post, and other local and national media outlets.
Our resolve was strengthened to provide a space for GIs, veterans and military families.  Through this year’s successful fundraising efforts Under the Hood was able to raise enough funds to extend our lease and just signed a lease for another year of operation. . . .
Here are just a few 2009 highlights:

  • This Spring, two University of Texas film students produced a short documentary on the coffeehouse.
  • On Memorial Day, active duty GIs led the first peace march in Killeen since the Vietnam era.
  • In July, Christians for Peace and other area peace activists held a silent march and vigil to the gates of Fort Hood.
  • In August, Victor Agosto and Travis Bishop, faced courts martial for resisting deployment to Afghanistan.  Under the Hood provided a critical support system for these soldiers.  Victor is now out of the Army and has joined the Fort Hood Support Network Board that operates Under the Hood.  The other soldier, Travis Bishop, was sentenced to a year and is serving that time in Fort Lewis.  On July 29, 2009, the day of Victor Agosto’s release from the Bell County Jail, Under the Hood hosted Col. Ann Wright (retired).
  • A GI and veterans writing workshop was held at Under the Hood on Veteran’s Day, followed by a candlelight vigil at the gates of Fort Hood. . . .
But we need your continued support to keep our doors open. The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Cafe in Killeen, Texas.   FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status.  Donations may be treated as tax-deductible.

We are especially grateful to our donors who make monthly contributions. . . . We want to acknowledge the help we have received from Veterans for Peace chapters, the Houston Peace and Justice Center, the Dallas Peace and Justice Center and CodePink.

The Court Martial of Travis Bishop

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

16 August 2009

Alice Embree : The Court Martial of Travis Bishop

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Travis Bishop (right), before his sentencing. With (left) journalist Dahr Jamail and attorney James Branum. Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Anti-war GI Travis Bishop found guilty;
joins Victor Agosto in Bell County jail

I can not say that a year in prison doesn’t scare me. I am terrified… (But) it would be scarier still to know that my fellow soldiers who feel as we feel would never find out what we are trying to accomplish. — Travis Bishop

By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / August 16, 2009

See ‘Protesters support Bishop and Agosto’ by Alice Embree, Below.

In the second court martial in two weeks, another Fort Hood soldier was sentenced on August 14th for refusing to deploy to Afghanistan.

Sgt. Travis Bishop was brought before special court martial proceedings, found guilty and sentenced to one year in prison. His rank and pay were reduced. He is expected to be held in the Bell County Correctional Unit before serving his sentence in a military jail. His discharge status will be determined later. Because Sgt. Bishop has a prior honorable discharge, his GI benefits may not be reduced.

Sgt. Bishop faced four charges: willful disobedience of a Non-Commissioned Officer, absence without leave and two counts of missing movement. The charges were more serious than those faced by Spc. Victor Agosto on August 5th. Agosto’s case was resolved in a summary court martial and he is serving a one month sentence in the Bell County Correctional Unit.

The courtroom resembled a civil courtroom with the judge in black robes. An Army defense attorney was seated with Bishop and his civilian defense attorney, James Branum. The panel, however, was hardly a peer panel. The jury seats were filled by eight Colonels, Lieutenant Colonels and Majors who had to be warned once not to fall asleep while the Judge read instructions.

A Fort Hood Public Affairs representative told Bishop supporters during a recess that Bishop was being tried in the same courtroom where Army Staff Sgt. Shane Werst had faced a court martial for shooting an unarmed Iraqi citizen. “Five privates turned a dime on him,” he said. Despite testimony that soldiers were ordered to plant a gun on the Iraqi citizen to make the death appear to be self defense, Werst was acquitted May 26, 2005. Bishop’s sentence for not deploying is a sobering contrast.

Bishop’s court martial began on Thursday and Bishop’s defense attorney and supporters had expected the arraignment, designation of a jury panel and testimony of one witness to be brief. Instead, the trial began in earnest and lasted five hours. At one point on Thursday, supporter Cynthia Thomas was asked by a Killeen police officer and an Army MP to leave the courtroom and explain her relationship with the defendant. Thomas asked if she were being detained and to speak to her attorney. She was not stopped from returning to the courtroom.

The prosecution brought Captain Chrisopher Hall in to testify that the absence of Travis Bishop from his unit had caused hardship to his unit. The defense presented four witnesses who testified to Travis Bishop’s sincerity of beliefs. Bishop filed a request for Conscientious Objector status in late May and the request is still pending.

Charles Luther, a defense witness with a background as a lay Baptist minister, spoke of Bishop’s religious beliefs. The defense attorney established that psychiatrist, Lt. Col. Adams, to whom Bishop had been referred, approved Bishop’s Conscientious Objector claim and that it was one of only two claims in his ten years that Adams had approved.

In a surprise moment at the end of testimony, the Prosecution decided to call Lt. Colonel Ronald Leininger to the stand. Leininger was the Brigade Chaplain to whom Bishop was referred for pastoral counseling. Bishop has described his deep disappointment in speaking to someone he thought would be attentive to his religious beliefs. Bishop said the Chaplain reduced his interview time and interrupted the interview repeatedly by receiving phone calls.

In the statement issued by the Chaplain after his visit with Bishop, he focused almost no attention on Bishop’s religious beliefs. Instead, he wrote that Bishop had been coached by Iraq Veterans Against the War and other antiwar activists. He went further to say that the affiliation that best described Bishop’s religious heritage was “Conservative Evangelicals” who the Captain said are “generally pro-military service with no pacifist tendencies in doctrine or practice. In fact, they make good soldiers.”

Bishop has received letters of support from a number of pastors who cite their church’s doctrine and practice supporting conscientious objection to war.

The court was recessed as the panel considered the verdict for about one hour. They found Sgt. Bishop guilty. In the sentencing phase, the civilian defense attorney, James Branum, asked for a three months sentence in light of Sgt. Bishop’s sincerity and previous good conduct, including a fourteen month deployment in Iraq. In particular, Branum focused on the fact that soldiers are never given information about their rights to Conscientious Objection. Branum said that a soldier who changes his or her belief about war doesn’t understand that there are options.

Maj. Matthew McDonald, who served as the judge, discounted the relevancy of whether Bishop was notified about his right to file for CO status. McDonald was quoted in the Killeen Daily Herald (8/14/09) as saying: “If every soldier in the Army who disobeyed an order could claim it was because they weren’t notified of conscientious objector status, we probably wouldn’t have a military any more.”

Prior to sentencing, Bishop’s testimony was forceful and moving. He cited several articles that protect a soldiers rights and noted that soldiers often are not informed of their rights, but that doesn’t relieve the Army of its responsibility to honor those rights. Bishop said that the right to pursue a claim of Conscientious Objection requires protection. He said that he was unaware that he could pursue a claim of Conscientious Objection until right before his deployment.

“The truth is, as soon as I discovered this process [C.O.] existed, I acted upon it. I left because I did not feel that I would have a sympathetic, understanding command structure to fully take my problems to, and also to give myself time to prepare for my C.O. application process, and the legal battle I’m currently fighting. These are not excuses. These are explanations. My hope is that you truly treat them as such during your sentencing deliberations.”

After being sentenced to the maximum jail term allowable under a Special Court Martial, Bishop had time to handwrite a note:

“To everyone who still cares: I can not say that a year in prison doesn’t scare me. I am terrified… But still, though I am terrified, it would be scarier still to know that my fellow soldiers who feel as we feel would never find out what we are trying to accomplish… Everyone who hears or reads this should know that I love you all, and my life is forever changed because of you. Victor and myself are starting something and it is now up to all of you to continue on. With all my heart. Travis.”

As Bishop was escorted from the Justice Center to a waiting van, supporters who were active duty soldiers or veterans stood at attention and saluted. Hands cuffed together, Bishop flashed a peace sign in return.

Demonstrators outside the Bell County Correctional Unit where Victor Agosto and Travis Bishop are being held. Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.

Protesters support Bishop and Agosto

Protesters gathered Saturday, August 15th, in support of two Afghanistan war resisters held in the Bell County Correctional Unit. Under a blazing Texas sun, protesters held signs and chanted.

Victor Agosto is incarcerated at the Bell County facility after being court martialed August 5th for refusing to deploy to Afghanistan. Agosto was sentenced to one month. Travis Bishop will be held in Bell County for about two weeks before his transfer to a military prison. Bishop was court martialed August 14th and received a sentence of one year.

Supporters plan to be present every Saturday while the resisters are in jail at this facility. For more information, go to the Under the Hood Cafe website.

Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / August 16,2009

http://theragblog.blogspot.com/