Ryan urges halt to Guard-bonus collections

In this Friday, Oct. 21, 2016 file photo, Robert D'Andrea, a retired Army major and Iraq war veteran, holds a frame with a photo of his team on his first deployment to Iraq in his home in Los Angeles. Nearly 10,000 California National Guard soldiers have been ordered to repay huge enlistment bonuses a decade after signing up to serve in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday.
In this Friday, Oct. 21, 2016 file photo, Robert D'Andrea, a retired Army major and Iraq war veteran, holds a frame with a photo of his team on his first deployment to Iraq in his home in Los Angeles. Nearly 10,000 California National Guard soldiers have been ordered to repay huge enlistment bonuses a decade after signing up to serve in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday.

WASHINGTON -- House Speaker Paul Ryan on Tuesday called for the Pentagon to immediately suspend efforts to recover enlistment bonuses paid to thousands of soldiers in California who signed up to serve in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"When those Californians answered the call to duty, they earned more from us than bureaucratic bungling and false promises," Ryan said, urging the Pentagon to suspend collection efforts until "Congress has time ... to protect service members from lifelong liability for [the Defense Department's] mistakes."

Ryan's comments came as the White House said President Barack Obama has warned the Defense Department not to "nickel and dime" service members who were victims of fraud by overzealous recruiters.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Tuesday that he did not believe that Obama would support a blanket waiver of repayments, but he said Guard members should not be held responsible for "unethical conduct or fraud perpetrated by someone else."

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, meanwhile, promised to resolve a conflict that has lingered for a decade.

The Los Angeles Times reported over the weekend that the Pentagon has demanded that some soldiers repay their enlistment bonuses after audits revealed overpayments by the California National Guard. Recruiters under pressure to fill ranks and hit enlistment goals at the height of the two wars improperly offered bonuses of $15,000 or more to soldiers who re-enlisted, the newspaper reported.

If soldiers refuse to pay the bonuses back, they could face interest charges, wage garnishments and tax liens.

The Pentagon said late Tuesday that it instructed at most 6,500 California Guard soldiers to repay the enlistment bonuses. That number is lower than a widely reported figure that nearly 10,000 soldiers have been told to repay part or all of their bonuses.

Defense Department spokesman Maj. Jamie Davis said an audit more than five years in the making concluded last month and showed that 1,100 soldiers received bonuses for which they were ineligible. Another 5,400 soldiers had erroneous paperwork that could have made them ineligible.

About $22 million has been collected so far from fewer than 2,000 soldiers, said Col. Peter Cross, a spokesman for the California National Guard.

Asked about the matter at a news conference Tuesday in Paris, Carter said the issue is complex and is being handled by the deputy secretary of defense, Robert Work.

"The first thing I want to say is that anybody who volunteers to serve in the armed forces of the United States deserves our gratitude and respect -- period," Carter said. Officials are going to look into the repayment problem "and resolve it," Carter added, but offered no details.

A defense authorization bill passed by the House would establish a statute of limitations on the military's ability to recover future overpayments and scrutinize existing cases of service member debt. House and Senate negotiators are trying to finalize the defense bill and pass it during the post-election, lame-duck session.

Ryan, R-Wis., called the bill an important step to establish a common standard for correcting accounting errors in the military.

Meanwhile, House and Senate oversight committees said they are investigating the California Guard's attempt to reclaim the re-enlistment bonuses.

The House Oversight Committee and the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs asked the Guard to turn over documents and audits related to the decade-old payments.

The National Guard has said the bonuses were wrongly paid, but its effort to reclaim them from thousands of soldiers and veterans in California and across the country has caused public outcry, including widespread criticism from members of Congress.

"Our soldiers deserve better, and it's up to the Department of Defense and Congress to fix this," said Deborah Hoffman, a spokesman for California Gov. Jerry Brown.

Other states may have been affected, but "California is where the majority of this occurred," said National Guard Bureau spokesman Laura Ochoa.

Information for this article was contributed by Lolita C. Baldor, Alison Noon and Kevin Freking of The Associated Press.

A Section on 10/26/2016

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