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Biden’s pardons still fall short for many LGBTQ veterans

Started by Lori Dee, July 22, 2024, 08:55:07 AM

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Lori Dee

Biden's pardons still fall short for many LGBTQ veterans
Article in Military Times
Originally Published in The War Horse
The War Horse - ANNE MARSHALL-CHALMERS
JULY 18, 2024

Andrew Espinosa was in his office in Boulder, Colorado, when the first message popped up on the Air Force veteran's phone: Andy, is this finally the resolution you've been working for?

President Biden had just announced he was "righting a historic wrong" by issuing pardons for gay veterans convicted of consensual sex ...

"I've got shivers," Mona McGuire, an Army veteran, told The War Horse on that June 26 morning, celebrating the news from her home in suburban Milwaukee in between interviews with CNN and the BBC. "I feel relief."

More than 25 years ago, both McGuire and Espinosa were kicked out of the military for being gay. Finally, it appeared, they would get a long-overdue reprieve and apology—and possibly qualify for health care and other veterans benefits they have been denied because of their "bad paper" discharges.

Then reality struck. In the weeks since the president's historic gesture, McGuire and Espinosa have dug into the details and learned they and thousands of other veterans are unlikely to qualify under the narrow confines of Biden's pardons. The whipsaw of emotions has renewed the sting of exclusion that has followed them for decades after their military service was cut short.


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