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Updated: Wednesday, 05 Sep 2012, 8:35 AM EDT
Published : Friday, 31 Aug 2012, 10:32 PM EDT
BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (WOOD) - A disturbing video taped at a United States military base in North Carolina shows one soldier hitting another with a wooden mallet, causing him to stumble backward, and seconds later collapse onto the floor and hit his head on a chair.
That is where the video ends. But according to 22-year-old Sgt. Phillip Roach's father, Ken, the sergeant then had a seizure and had to be taken to a hospital to receive stitches.
Sgt. Roach flies a special type of plane, among other things, but is currently unable to do so because of the seizure, says his father.
Sgt. Roach has been in the US Army for five years and recently promoted from specialist to sergeant. Being hit with the mallet was meant to be some sort of "initiation."
His father said both the soldier who struck his son with the wooden mallet, and the soldier who filmed the incident, are his son's superiors.
"He needs punishment. That was assault with a deadly weapon," Ken Roach said. "He could've killed my son and he should pay for it."
After reaching out to the president's office, Roach's father received a letter acknowledging the "unauthorized ceremony," calling it a "clear incident of hazing that caused injury to a great soldier."
The letter also confirms the soldier who hit Phillip in the video has been reprimanded. But Ken Roach called it a "slap on the wrist" and said the punishment is not good enough.
"I'm not mad at the Army," Roach's father said. "I'm mad at the individuals who done it and who's trying to give a little slap on the wrist and say, 'It's good to go. Let's just sweep it under the rug. Send him somewhere else and be done with it.'"
US Sen. Carl Levin, chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, is also weighing in. On Friday, he released a statement asking the Army to review this case.
"There's a possibility that he may never be able to clear medically and be able to do his job and they could medically discharge him just because of this stupid hazing," Roach's father said.
On Saturday, Roach's father told 24 Hour News 8 the Army has been in contact with him. Officials told Roach that they would make sure there would be no retaliation, and the soldier who hit his son with the mallet has been moved, and had to pay a $1,000 fine.
Ken Roach said he is not entirely satisfied, and told 24 Hour News 8 he won't be until that soldier is court-marshaled.
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Levin released the following statement Friday:
“I am very concerned about this hazing incident, and I am asking the Army to urgently review it. Preventing and responding to incidents of hazing is a leadership issue that requires actions at senior levels of the Army. Earlier this year, the Senate Armed Services Committee, which I chair, adopted a provision in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 that requires the service secretaries, in consultation with the service chiefs, to report to the committee on hazing in their services.”
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