Sergeant who âpinned downâ soldier will leave Army, inquest told
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A senior sergeant who reportedly âpinned down and tried to kissâ a teenager solider plans to leave the Army, an inquest has been told.
Royal Artillery Gunner Jaysley Beck, 19, was found dead in her barracks at Larkhill Camp, Wiltshire, on 15 December 2021 after a work party.
The inquest heard she had filed a complaint against Battery Sergeant Major Michael Webber after the alleged incident.
Mr Webber received a minor sanction on his record, but details of the offence were omitted and a âmiscommunicationâ meant improper legal advice was given.
Appearing at the inquest on Wednesday, Mr Webber declined to answer questions surrounding the incident and referred to his legal counsel.
However, he did confirm that he had written a letter of apology to Gunner Beck and that the letterâs content was true.
The coroner asked: âYou will see in the letter you describe your behaviour as âabsolutely unacceptableâ â what was your behaviour?â.
He then refused to answer this question.
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The inquest heard he was promoted to Warrant Officer 1 rank in May 2022 â despite the minor sanction he received for the incident with Gunner Beck.
Mr Webber confirmed he intends to leave the Army in April this year.
The alleged incident occurred at an adventure training exercise at Thorney Island, near Emsworth in Hampshire, in July 2021.
Gunner Beck claimed WO1 Webber told her he had been âwaiting for a moment for them to be aloneâ, had engaged her in a drinking game called Last Man Standing before grabbing her leg and trying to kiss her.
Shortly after, Gunner Beck called a friend âfrightened and in tearsâ because âsomeone tried it on with herâ, the inquest was told.
Lance Bombardier Kirsty Davis previously told the inquest: â[Webber] was trying to kiss her and she was trying to push him away, but he was pinning her down.
âJaysley had told him ânoâ, tried to get away from him but he had persisted so she left.â
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Following the incident, Major Robert Ronz was assigned to be the deciding officer in finding a consequence for Mr Webberâs behaviour.
Giving evidence at the inquest on Wednesday, he said the incident fell into âminor sanction territoryâ and required no formal investigation.
âMy decision on whether my administrative action was appropriate was based largely on the legal advice that was received,â he said.
However, the inquest was told that there had been a âmiscommunicationâ through the chain of command and details concerning Mr Webberâs attempt to touch Gunner Beckâs leg had been lost.
Major Ronz said he had been âunaware of any physical contactâ, but admitted had he known, the outcome would likely have been very different.
Army policy states any offence which has a sexual element should be referred for legal advice and reported to Military Service Police for a formal investigation.
Instead, the only paper trail that exists of the incident is a minor sanction record- which simply cites âinappropriate behaviour unbecoming of a warrant officerâ.
Major Ronz added: âThere is a loss of corporate knowledge because the detail is not sufficient.â
Minor sanctions have a âshelf lifeâ of two years, and are wiped completely if a soldier is posted elsewhere, he said.
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Colonel Samantha Shepherd previously told the inquest that she took a more âvictim-ledâ approach to Mr Webberâs disciplinary action.
âI wanted Jaysley to feel [âŠ] she was part of the process and had a degree of control over the outcome,â she explained.
Questions have been raised over whether this placed unnecessary pressure on the 19-year-old, and risked opening her up to backlash from colleagues.
An Army service inquiry report published in October 2023 said this was âpossibly a factor that may have influenced her failure to report other events that happened subsequentlyâ.
The inquest has also heard that Gunner Beck received thousands of messages from another senior colleague, Bombardier Ryan Mason, whom she described as being âpsychotic and possessiveâ.
It detailed three more âcontributory factorsâ to her death â including the âsignificant strainâ of a sexual relationship with a married colleague in the last few weeks of her life; a relationship that ended in November 2021 which involved ârepeated allegations of unfaithfulness on the part of the boyfriendâ, and an âunhealthy approach to alcohol, with episodes of binge-drinkingâ.
The hearing continues.
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