G.I. Seeks Conscientious Objector Status
Mar 16, 6:12 PM (ET)
By ADRIAN SAINZ
NORTH MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A U.S. soldier who refused to return to Iraq after
seeing civilians killed reported to his unit in Florida on Tuesday and said he
would go to prison rather than take part in "an oil-driven war."
Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia, who is seeking to be declared a conscientious
objector, met with officials at his Florida National Guard unit after repeating
his determination not to return to the Middle East and fight.
"I'm prepared to go to prison because I'll have a clear conscience," Mejia said.
Guard spokesman Jon Myatt said Mejia has been classified as a deserter because
he had been missing from his unit for more than 30 days.
Myatt said a warrant to arrest Mejia could be issued if he failed to appear
Wednesday at Fort Stewart, Ga., from which his unit is deployed. He said the 28-
year-old Mejia had not been charged.
Mejia said he's been treated with "respect and dignity" by the military and he
intends to report to the Georgia base.
Mejia, of Miami Beach, could face up to one year in prison for being absent
without leave and up to five years if convicted of desertion, said Tod Ensign,
director of Citizen Soldier, a New York-based group that is organizing Mejia's
defense.
Mejia was in Iraq for about five months last year until October, when he came
home on leave and did not return to duty. He surrendered Monday at an Air Force
base in Massachusetts and was ordered to report to his Florida National Guard
unit.
"The justification for this war is money and no soldier should go to Iraq and
give his life for oil," Mejia told reporters Tuesday.
He was accompanied by his mother, an aunt and Spc. Oliver Perez, who served
with him, when he reported to the Florida armory.
Perez said Mejia is "a brave leader" and should not be prosecuted.
"I fought next to him in many battles. He is not a coward," Perez said.
Mejia's attorney, Louis Font, said he faxed papers seeking conscientious
objector status to Fort Stewart on Tuesday.
In the filing, Mejia said he was particularly upset over an incident in which
his unit was ambushed and innocent civilians were hit in the ensuing gunfire,
and another in which he says an Iraqi boy died after confusion over which
military doctor should treat him.
A native of Nicaragua, Mejia is a permanent resident of the United States who
served in the Army for three years. He had served in the National Guard for
five years when his unit was called to active duty. In civilian life, he was a
psychology student at the University of Miami.
Mejia said he joined the military upon his arrival in the United States so he
could work his way into American society. He could not say whether he might be
deported because of his refusal to serve, but said, "Whatever sacrifice I have
to make, I have to go there."
Meanwhile, in Iraq, a commander said two U.S. Army medics there have applied
for conscientious objector status. Capt. Todd Grissom said the two, both
privates first class, notified the Army of their request on Feb. 9, the day
before their Germany-based infantry unit was sent to Iraq.
The two want to be honorably discharged from the military because the idea of
killing is "revolting" to them, Grissom said Tuesday.
Grissom would not identify the two soldiers, saying only that they come from
California and Illinois. Their requests were being investigated, he said.
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