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Ohio and Wright-Patt's Air Force research lab to continue to share knowledge, tech
Ohio and Wright-Patt's Air Force research lab to continue to share knowledge, tech

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Ohio and Wright-Patt's Air Force research lab to continue to share knowledge, tech

Jun. 2—BEAVERCREEK — The state of Ohio and the Air Force's chief research and science arm renewed an agreement to share knowledge and technical know-how Monday, agreeing to find ways to foster mutually beneficial economic development in Ohio. Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Brig. Gen. Jason Bartolomei, commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), signed memorandum of understanding (MOU) documents at the Pentagon Tower Club. "This is a relationship that is vitally important to the state of Ohio, and I hope, general, vitally important to the Air Force," DeWine said to Bartolomei in a joint press conference announcing the continued partnership. Bartolomei called Ohio "a vital partner." "This memorandum represents a shared vision of the future," the one-star general said. Headquartered at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, AFRL is the primary scientific research and development center for the Air Force. Wright-Patterson itself is a hugely important economic engine for the Dayton area and the state, being Ohio's largest single-site employer with some 38,000 military and civilian employees and a reliable magnet for high-paying defense industry jobs. "The brainpower we have at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is unsurpassed anywhere in the world," DeWine said. DeWine credited Wright-Patterson's importance and location with attracting industry players such as Joby Aviation and Anduril Industries to the state. The governor singled out for praise the SkyVision system at the Springfield-Beckley Municipal Airport, a system that allows Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) control in the national airspace system for drone operators. "The future of Ohio is tied very, very closely to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base," DeWine said, adding: "What's going on in Springfield is also vitally important." Springfield-Beckley is also home to the National Advanced Air Mobility Center of Excellence that supports research at Wright-Patterson, AFRL, NASA and a host of private companies. In 2007, the state and the Air Force signed a similar memorandum of understanding. "This partnership will enable AFRL to engage with the state of Ohio at a higher level to maximize AFRL and state of Ohio collaboration opportunities," Maj. Gen. Curtis Bedke, then AFRL commander, said at the time. Based at Wright-Patterson, AFRL performs Air Force-focused research with more than 12,500 employees across the world.

Former Air Force Commander Punished with 21 Days' Confinement, Forfeiture of Pay After Guilty Plea
Former Air Force Commander Punished with 21 Days' Confinement, Forfeiture of Pay After Guilty Plea

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Former Air Force Commander Punished with 21 Days' Confinement, Forfeiture of Pay After Guilty Plea

A former commander at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio was sentenced to 21 days in confinement and forfeiture of pay after he pleaded guilty to having an inappropriate relationship with a staff sergeant despite being ordered by superiors to stop. Col. Christopher Meeker, the former commander of Wright-Patterson's 88th Air Base Wing, was sentenced Tuesday evening after entering a guilty plea to violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, including Article 90, willfully disobeying a superior commissioned officer, and Article 134, fraternization. As part of his plea agreement, the government dismissed a specification of extramarital sexual conduct that he was previously charged with. Col. Matthew Stoffel, the judge in the case, sentenced Meeker to 21 days' confinement at the Ohio base, as well as reprimand and forfeiture of $7,000 of pay per month for two months, a news release from Air Force Materiel Command said. Read Next: Vehicle Incident at Border Kills 2 Marines, Injures Another; Investigation Underway A UCMJ legal expert told that the case is significant, noting that it's quite uncommon for those types of cases to end in imprisonment and adding they often are settled with administrative and nonjudicial punishment. "There was something extra egregious here," Eric Carpenter, a former military lawyer who is now a law professor at Florida International University, told in an interview Wednesday. "The jail time really probably reflected the egregiousness of the violation of the orders." Meeker had been removed from his command of the 88th Air Base Wing on Dec. 29, 2023, by Lt. Gen. Donna Shipton, the commander of the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center. But the behavior that led to the court-martial took place after Meeker's time in that leadership position, the base said in the news release. "Air Force prosecutors said Meeker fraternized by engaging in a personal and sexual relationship with a staff sergeant," the news release from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base said. "He also disobeyed Shipton's direct order to discontinue all electronic and personal contact with the enlisted airman by continuing the relationship." Meeker was eventually charged Oct. 25 with violations of three articles of the UCMJ. Shipton had transferred the case to 18th Air Force Commander Maj. Gen. Charles Bolton, who served as the convening authority, due to potentially being called as a witness in the case. Notably, Meeker opted to waive an Article 32 pre-trial hearing and, upon entering a guilty plea Tuesday, "permanently waived his right to present evidence and had to explain why he was guilty." Meeker did not answer a phone call or text messages sent to a number listed for him in public records Wednesday. Wright-Patterson detailed that Meeker said he "willfully disobeyed" an in-person and electronic no-contact offer and that he acted "selfishly, for my own personal happiness." Meeker marks the latest Air Force officer in recent years to plead guilty during court-martial proceedings. Maj. Gen. Phillip Stewart, the former commander of the 19th Air Force, faced a court-martial last year after being accused of sexual assault and other allegations by a subordinate. He pleaded guilty to some of the lesser charges and was found not guilty of sexual assault. Former Maj. Gen. William Cooley, previously the commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory, was convicted in 2022 of forcibly kissing his sister-in-law and then retired as a colonel. Related: 2-Star Air Force General Pleads Guilty to Unprofessional Relationship, Adultery as Sexual Assault Trial Begins

Former Air Force Commander at Wright-Patterson Faces Court-Martial
Former Air Force Commander at Wright-Patterson Faces Court-Martial

Yahoo

time15-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Former Air Force Commander at Wright-Patterson Faces Court-Martial

A court-martial is underway this week for a former commander at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, who is accused of adultery and fraternization. Col. Christopher Meeker, the former commander of the 88th Air Base Wing, was removed from his leadership position in late December 2023. In December 2024, it was announced that he was facing three violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The charges include "one charge and one specification under Article 90, Willfully Disobeying Superior Commissioned Officer; and another charge and two specifications under Article 134, Extramarital Sexual Conduct and Fraternization," Wright-Patterson announced at the time in a press release. Read Next: Massachusetts Guard Revokes Shaving Waivers WDTN, Dayton's NBC affiliate, reported Tuesday afternoon that Meeker entered a guilty plea for all charges. Base spokespeople at Wright-Patterson did not immediately return a request for comment Tuesday afternoon from asking about Meeker's plea or whether he faces a bench or jury trial. Derek Kaufman, a spokesman for Air Force Materiel Command, told on Tuesday morning that the trial is docketed for two days but that could be subject to change. The trial was originally scheduled for this summer at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. However, it was announced in December that Air Force Life Cycle Management Center Commander Lt. Gen. Donna Shipton at Wright-Patterson could "be a material witness in the case," adding the transfer to a different base was "in the interest of justice." Kaufman told in a statement that, for the "convenience of trial participants," the court-martial would take place at Wright-Patterson. Scott Air Force Base's 18th Air Force Commander Maj. Gen. Charles D. Bolton is still the convening authority. Such moves aren't uncommon in the military justice system. Eric Carpenter, a former military lawyer who is now a law professor at Florida International University, told in an interview Tuesday that choosing a convening authority or judge from another base eliminates any potential conflicts that might emerge, while having the trial locally prevents witnesses from having to pay for travel to a different base. "That can happen when you have a convening authority that might otherwise be conflicted," Carpenter said. "They find somebody neutral, and then that convening authority can refer the case." WHIO-TV, Dayton's CBS affiliate, reported last year that Meeker was being represented by a defense lawyer with Joint Base Langley-Eustis Area Defense Counsel. Spokespeople for the counsel group did not immediately return a request for comment asking whether it was still representing Meeker. Carpenter told that it's "pretty unusual" for any allegations of consensual affairs to go to trial in the military justice system, saying they're typically handled with administrative punishment. Meeker's trial this week follows other high-profile Air Force officers facing court-martial proceedings in recent years. Maj. Gen. Phillip Stewart, the former commander of the 19th Air Force, faced a court-martial last year after being accused of sexual assault and other allegations by a subordinate. He was ultimately found not guilty of sexual assault, but he pleaded guilty to and was found guilty of lesser charges. In 2022, reported on the court-martial proceedings for former Maj. Gen. William Cooley, previously the commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory, who was convicted in a 2023 bench trial of forcibly kissing his sister-in-law and was the first Air Force general ever to face a military trial. Related: Former Air Force Commander at Wright-Patterson Charged with Adultery, Faces Court-Martial

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