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soc / soc.women / Marine Veteran Who Refused COVID-19 Vaccine Detained at Former Duty Station, Transferred to Japanese Authorities

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o Marine Veteran Who Refused COVID-19 Vaccine Detained at Former Duty Station, Trauseapen

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Subject: Marine Veteran Who Refused COVID-19 Vaccine Detained at Former Duty Station, Transferred to Japanese Authorities
From: useapen
Newsgroups: soc.women, sci.military.naval, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, japan.chat.military, sac.politics
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Date: Mon, 1 Jan 2024 09:06 UTC
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From: yourdime@outlook.com (useapen)
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Subject: Marine Veteran Who Refused COVID-19 Vaccine Detained at Former Duty Station, Transferred to Japanese Authorities
Date: Mon, 1 Jan 2024 09:06:10 -0000 (UTC)
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A former Marine lance corporal who refused the COVID-19 vaccine and was
kicked out of the service returned to her former Japan-based duty station
in an apparent act of civil disobedience and was arrested by police
earlier this month for alleged trespassing.

Catherine Arnett, 25, was separated from the Marine Corps after spending
113 days in pre-trial confinement awaiting court-martial for allegedly
refusing orders to board a plane to the United States, among other charges
that were dropped by the Marine Corps earlier this year.

According to Stars and Stripes, which first reported the arrest, Arnett
was transferred from American military police to Japanese authorities on
Dec. 1 after attempting to enter her former duty station, Marine Corps Air
Station Iwakuni, at 2:30 a.m. local time. She was released from custody
nearly two weeks ago, according to the publication.

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Military.com spoke to Jamie Engel, who said she was Arnett's "acting
secretary." Several pictures of the two posing together were posted to
social media. Arnett did not respond to Military.com's inquiry via
Facebook Messenger.

Engel said she had not heard from Arnett since her reported release
earlier this month.

Engel's last contact with Arnett was through the American embassy in Japan
around Dec. 8 when she received a letter apparently from Arnett, she said.
The U.S. consulate in Fukuoka, Japan, did not respond to the publication's
inquiries, and Engel declined to provide direct emails from the embassy.

"She wanted to stand on principle that everything -- her discharge �
everything was illegal because the basis of her even facing retaliation
was because of an unlawful order," Engel said, adding that Arnett did not
accept her separation orders and believed herself to remain on active duty
"on principle."

Arnett originally faced an administrative separation for refusing the
vaccine last year. After defying orders to board a plane at least three
times, she was ordered to pre-trial confinement. The Marine Corps
eventually dropped all charges against her, which included missing a
military flight and disobeying an order from an officer; she received a
general discharge under honorable conditions, according to Stars and
Stripes.

When asked about her arrest, the Marine Corps referred Military.com's
inquiries to Japanese authorities.

"Catherine Arnett was separated from the United States Marine Corps
several months ago and has since had no official affiliation with the
service," 1st Lt. Aaron Ellis, a spokesperson for MCAS Iwakuni, told
Military.com in an emailed statement Dec. 13. "Since Catherine Arnett is a
civilian and was not in military custody, we do not have any additional
information."

Ellis said that all unauthorized entries of U.S. military installations in
Japan are punishable under local law.

Stars and Stripes reported that Arnett was detained by military police on
suspicion of violating the status of forces agreement between the U.S. and
Japan.

"BRUH, like incarceration here in Japan was ONLY the natural trajectory of
this entire ordeal starting in September 2021," a statement provided by
Engel from Arnett began, alluding to the federal government's mandate for
all of its employees to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.

Earlier this year, the Defense Department rescinded the mandate. In
October, it was ordered by a Florida District Court Judge to pay $1.8
million in legal fees as settlement for two lawsuits that challenged the
order, though plaintiffs did not receive any of the money, Military.com
reported.

Arnett said anyone who willingly separated from the military after
refusing the COVID-19 vaccine was "verifiably a coward." According to the
letter, Arnett believes she was subject to "religious and intellectual
persecution" for refusing the vaccine and encouraged others to "formulate
their own ideations" about how to civilly disobey.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/marine-veteran-refused-covid-19-205512323.html

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