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Commanding officers interfered in sexual assault investigations, retired military police officer says

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A former military police officer says he faced commanding officers who interfered in his sexual assault cases and prosecutors who were reluctant to move forward with charges within the Canadian Armed Forces’ justice system.

Retired sergeant Jesse Zillman’s experience came after the leadership of the Armed Forces has pledged to have a zero-tolerance attitude toward sexual harassment and violence in the ranks.

  • WATCH | The Fifth Estate’s documentary, “Broken Honour: Sexual misconduct in the military,” on CBC-TV and CBC Gem at 9 p.m.

Zillman was a trained specialized sexual assault investigator with the Canadian Forces National Investigative Service (CFNIS) until his retirement in 2019, when he joined a civilian police agency in Manitoba.

While working for the Canadian Armed Forces, Zillman said he developed a distrust of the military’s internal justice system and came to believe criminal allegations should no longer be processed by the Forces’ own police, prosecutors and judges.

“The military justice system seems ill-equipped to deal with these types of intimate crimes, sexual assaults, sexual exploitation, that type of thing,” Zillman told The Fifth Estate. “It doesn’t feel like that system was designed to deal with those types of offences.”

National Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan did not reply to The Fifth Estate‘s interview request.

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Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan, left, and Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Jonathan Vance are pictured in 2015. Both are under fire at a parliamentary committee over how a complaint about Vance was handled by the government. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

In 2015, when faced with hundreds of allegations of assault and harassment, Gen. Jonathan Vance, the chief of defence staff, launched a campaign called Operation Honour that promised to lead the Canadian Armed Forces into a world where it was safe for victims of sexual misconduct to come forward.

An independent inquiry by former Supreme Court Justice Marie Deschamps had found sexual assault and harassment in the ranks had been vastly unreported because victims feared their superiors wouldn’t take their complaints seriously and that they would face repercussions.

However, the solution, Operation Honour, did not live up to its promise, an investigation by CBC’s The Fifth Estate has found.

In a four-year period from the start of Operation Honour in 2015, a recent study calculated the military had a 14 per cent conviction rate for sexual assault, lower than the 42 per cent conviction rate in the civilian judicial system across Canada.

In that time, Elaine Craig, a law professor at Dalhousie University in Halifax, found only two convictions of a male military member sexually assaulting a woman.

Operation Honour included enhanced training for CFNIS investigators and involved awareness sessions for members across the country about what constituted inappropriate sexual behaviour and how those with knowledge of such sexual misconduct could report it.

Requests for victim’s contact information

Yet Zillman said he repeatedly found that the commanding officers of members accused of crimes acted in ways he felt interfered with sexual assault investigations.

“We would have units that would reach out and ask for the victim’s contact information, which is a huge no, no you cannot have that, but it seemed to continue happening,” Zillman said.

“There’s absolutely no reason that you as this person’s employer need to know the information about the victim. That’s none of your business.”

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Zillman was released from the military police in 2019 and later joined a civilian police force in Manitoba. (Submitted by Jesse Zillman)

These supervisors, most of whom outranked him, would be “more influential than an employer ought to be,” he said, and risk the independence of the investigation.

“You certainly run the risk of obstructing an investigation depending on how far into it you start getting and poking around.” 

‘They make it their right to know’

Jessica Miller, who retired from the army as a sergeant in 2018, said she believes Zillman’s claims because of her own experience of reporting sexual misconduct to the military police. 

“I am not surprised someone from a chain of command was asking for that stuff because there’s no right to privacy in the Forces, it feels like,” she said.

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Jessica Miller was a medic in the army. She released from the Forces in 2018. (Submitted by Jessica Miller)

Miller’s complaint resulted in criminal charges, and proceeded to a court martial hearing in 2018. Her former supervisor, retired master warrant officer Mike Durnford, pleaded guilty to a disciplinary offence and admitted to kissing and hugging her without consent.

By that time, Miller had applied for release from the Forces, where she had worked as a medic.

“I didn’t even want to come forward until I knew I was safe from them, the chain of command,” Miller said.

“The chain of command has no right to know any of this but they make it their right to know and it’s wrong.”

Miller now lives in Windsor, N.S., and runs the Veteran Farm Project, which grows vegetables for veterans’ families in need. Other military members who have faced abuse volunteer there, and Miller said several have spoken to her about privacy breaches after reporting their experiences of sexual misconduct.

WATCH: Retired medic explains why she feared reporting sexual misconduct:

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Jessica Miller served as a medic on naval ships. She says she feared retaliation if she reported the behaviour of her supervisor. 1:02

In her own case, she said her chain of command was informed of her complaint before military police, and that any actions she took throughout the investigation were made with her supervisors’ knowledge.

“I don’t think we have a police system in the Canadian Armed Forces. We have a chain of command system,” she said.

“In real policing, the investigators are left to do their investigation. They don’t have a chain of command breathing down their neck.”

Miller is now suing the Canadian Armed Forces and her former supervisor.

Top brass under scrutiny

Those watching the military justice system have been shaken over the past month as new allegations of sexual misconduct surfaced about the architect of Operation Honour himself.

Vance had just relinquished his command of the Canadian Armed Forces for his retirement when Global News reported that he had been accused of an inappropriate sexual relationship with a subordinate, as well as allegations of making sexual comments to another more junior soldier.

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Vance, pictured here in 2016, when he was chief of defence staff, led a charge against sexual misconduct in the Forces. Now he is under investigation. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

The military has strict rules barring senior officers from having relationships with junior members because of the imbalance of power and how each member reports up through a chain of command that ends with the chief of defence staff.

Only a few weeks later, Vance’s successor, Admiral Art McDonald, resigned from the role after police launched an investigation into his alleged sexual misconduct involving a subordinate while deployed in 2010.

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Vance, centre, and Admiral Art MacDonald, right, are pictured here in 2019. Both are under investigation after allegations of sexual misconduct surfaced. (CBC)

A parliamentary committee is holding hearings to inquire into what the government knew about both cases. In recent weeks, more allegations of sexual misconduct against high-ranking officials have surfaced as well.

Disappointed in ‘champion for change’

Miller said she was not surprised at the allegations, but was disappointed.

Vance billed himself “as the champion for change and doing better and duty to report,” she said, and his promise through Operation Honour was a big reason she came forward.

Miller said she doubts the CFNIS and the court martial system itself are independent enough for a thorough, impartial investigation of the Forces’ highest ranking officers.

“You can’t even get a corporal charged with sexual assault. Do you think they’re going to charge Vance? No,” Miller said.

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Miller, a retired military medic, runs the Veteran Farm Project in Nova Scotia, which supplies food to families in need. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)

If either criminal or disciplinary charges are laid related to allegations of misconduct, those would typically proceed through the military’s own court martial system, although some are occasionally sent to be handled by the justice system that serves the general public.

All those in the military’s justice system — from the military police to the judge — report up the chain of command to the chief of defence staff.

Prosecuting high-ranking officers a ‘significant challenge’

Retired colonel and lawyer Michel Drapeau, who is a leading expert in military justice, said he wonders how a court martial could hear a case involving Vance or McDonald when no one in the military, including judges, would outrank them.

“It would be quite a significant challenge to prosecute a chief of defence staff either serving or retired before the court martial system as it currently exists,” he said.

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Michel Drapeau, a retired colonel who practises military law, has represented many current and former military members who have experienced sexual misconduct on the job. (Doug Husby/CBC)

Drapeau said that typically, the accused’s commanding officer must approve the charges the police lay against them. The commanding officers, or their representative, typically approve any conditions laid against an accused, as well.

But, Drapeau said, chiefs of defence staff don’t have commanding officers.

‘None of your business’

Zillman moved up in the military police to join the CFNIS, the specialized investigation unit, in 2016, and took courses on investigating sexual assault and on interviewing trauma victims. His last posting was in B.C., where he was the sergeant in charge of the Pacific region’s sexual offence response team.

An external inquiry had just found the skills of military police were lacking, that officers were confused about policies, insensitive to sexual assault victims and lacked training on concepts such as consent. The review found victims often did not report sexual assault or harassment because of a lack of trust in the justice system, and those who did described their experiences as “atrocious.”

WATCH | Retired sergeant Jesse Zillman describes interactions with the accused’s chain of command:

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Retired sergeant Jesse Zillman investigated sexual assault cases in the Canadian military. He says military members outside the police force would try to get involved in his inquiries. 0:37

Zillman said that although he received specialized training, most military police officers outside the CFNIS did not, and that he did come across mistakes police had made in some cases.

He said he spent a portion of his daily work fielding calls from commanding officers whose members were under investigation, and sometimes had to ask his own superiors to step in.

“That was a message that had to be sent a lot, like back off, this is none of your business, it just happens to involve one of your soldiers, that’s the end.”

He also became frustrated with the military’s own prosecutors, who he felt sometimes had little criminal law experience.

jesse zillman
Zillman spent 13 years in the Canadian Armed Forces. He left the Forces as a sergeant in the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service. (Submitted by Jesse Zillman)

He said the prosecutors would try to keep the cases in-house, under military control, rather than send them to civilian authorities. Sexual assault can technically be tried under either court system.

“We got a lot of pressure to move them through the National Defence Act or at least let [the military prosecutors] screen them first,” Zillman said. “The problem with that is it’s known as ‘Crown shopping,’ and you can’t do that.”

So Zillman said he would describe the pros and cons of each system to the complainant, and allow them to decide which court system to go through.

‘They walk away’

However, when it went through the military system, he said he would often watch as the prosecution and defence negotiated plea agreements that he felt were inappropriate.

Instead of negotiating a sexual assault case down to assault, military prosecutors would instead drop the criminal charge in favour of a code of conduct discipline violation that typically carried a weaker punishment and no criminal record, he said.

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Zillman is pictured on a deployment. (Submitted by Jesse Zillman)

“Now you’ve got you know somebody who has potentially done a fairly violent offence. Any sexual assault is a violent offence by its nature but it can be quite graphic,” Zillman said.

“And then they walk away with a disgraceful conduct conviction and none of the conditions that are meant to protect society on top of it.”

‘We don’t give fines out for sexual assault’

The recent Dalhousie University study on the military’s court martial system suggests that what Zillman describes — allegations of sex crimes being pleaded down to discipline violations — has become standard practice.

Craig studied all miltiary court martial sexual assault cases since the late 1990s when the Canadian forces was allowed to share jurisdiction for the crime, when it had a military connection.

She found that since Operation Honour began in 2015, most sexual assault charges were resolved with plea deals to non-criminal discipline offences. In the four-year period since the campaign began, Craig found the military system had a sexual assault conviction rate of 14 per cent, less than half of what the civilian system would see in that time period.

WATCH | Law professor Elaine Craig studied the military’s handling of sexual assault cases:

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Dalhouise University’s Elaine Craig studied how military courts handled sexual assault cases in the four years following the launch of Operation Honour. She says many were resolved as discipline violations. 0:45

“Some cases that involved very serious sexual assaults … involved plea bargains in which the accused individual pled guilty to behaving disgracefully,” Craig said. “We’re talking about what I would characterize as serious aggressive incidents of sexual violence.”

The punishments, she found, were often fines or reprimands, which amount to a note on an employment record.

“They’re not sanctions that would be recognizable in our civilian criminal justice system,” Craig said. “We don’t give fines out for sexual assault in the civilian system.”

Vance’s reassurances

Although critiques of the military’s handling of these cases have poured in, Vance touted Operation Honour as a success for years.

In 2016, Statistics Canada reported that more than one-quarter of female regular Armed Forces members reported being sexually assaulted at least once in their careers — a higher figure than was previously known.

Yet Vance reassured his troops.

“There may even be people who question whether Operation Honour is working,” he said. “Well, I believe it is.”

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Vance, pictured in 2016, retired in January. A parliamentary committee is investigating what the government knew about his alleged sexual misconduct. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

Two years later, he reassured the Senate as well, appearing before the defence committee.

“Our overall conviction rate for sexual misconduct has been 87 per cent since we began Operation Honour,” Vance told senators in 2018.

“This puts our conviction rates higher than in the civilian justice system for both sexual assault and lesser offences, speaking to both the effectiveness and necessity of our military justice system.”

It appears Vance had compared the military’s record of disciplinary convictions, a far lower bar, to standard sexual assault criminal convictions to come up with a higher number.

The Department of National Defence did not respond to a request for comment.

Zillman said his years with the military police make him believe the only way forward is to start again.

“It seemed like there was a lot of will to keep it the status quo,” Zillman said.

“If I could change something, I would say there is room to scrap the military justice system altogether. I think that that is a doable thing.”

Watch full episodes of The Fifth Estate on CBC Gem, the CBC’s streaming service.

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