Page de couverture de Inside the Army’s SHARP Meltdown with Jeff Gorres | S.O.S. #242

Inside the Army’s SHARP Meltdown with Jeff Gorres | S.O.S. #242

Inside the Army’s SHARP Meltdown with Jeff Gorres | S.O.S. #242

Écouter gratuitement

Voir les détails du balado

À propos de cet audio

Send us a text

Power reveals character, and nowhere is that more visible than inside military sexual assault response. We sit down with Jeff Goris—career aviator, senior SHARP advocate at Fort Hood, and later a Department of the Army civilian—to unpack how a program meant to protect survivors gets kneecapped by backlogs, weak command emphasis, and investigations run by the very people with skin in the game. From the McQueen scandal to the wake-up after Vanessa Guillén, Jeff traces the specific mechanisms that fail victims and also crush the falsely accused: preliminary inquiries used to pre-shape outcomes, administrative actions that sidestep due process, and clearance removals that quietly end careers.

Across an unflinching conversation, Jeff explains the ethics of real advocacy: know the policies cold, focus on the victim’s needs, and document every step. He shares hard-won tactics for anyone at risk of retaliation—professional liability insurance, early legal counsel, and meticulous records—while making the case that true reform depends on independent investigations outside command influence. We talk about culture honestly: why achievement often trumps character at senior levels, how retaliation silences truth-tellers, and why the “court of public opinion” sometimes becomes the only path to accountability when internal systems stall.

This episode offers a practical roadmap and a challenge. If leaders want safer formations, they must separate adjudication from command interests, empower IGs to investigate retaliation, and give both accusers and accused the right to present evidence and witnesses. Until then, advocates and allies can still win small, meaningful battles—supporting survivors, protecting whistleblowers, and telling verified stories that make indifference costly. Listen, share, and help push for due process, independent investigations, and culture that rewards courage over convenience. If this resonates, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what reform would you mandate first?

The stories and opinions shared on Stories of Service are told in each guest’s own words. They reflect personal experiences, memories, and perspectives. While every effort is made to present these stories respectfully and authentically, Stories of Service does not verify the accuracy o

Support the show

Visit my website: https://thehello.llc/THERESACARPENTER
Read my writings on my blog: https://www.theresatapestries.com/
Listen to other episodes on my podcast: https://storiesofservice.buzzsprout.com
Watch episodes of my podcast:
https://www.youtube.com/c/TheresaCarpenter76


Pas encore de commentaire