US marine stationed in Australia is charged with rape as base is ordered into lockdown
US Marine stationed in Australia is accused of rape while the base is on lockdown
A US Marine stationed in Australia has been charged with aggravated assault and sexual intercourse without consent.
The 20-year-old marine was arrested on Monday in Palmerston, south of Darwin, in connection with the incident that allegedly occurred there earlier that day.
The American has been granted bail to appear in Darwin Local Court at a later date.
Since 2012, The Marine Rotational Force has stationed personnel across Australia’s Top End at various military bases.
Starting with just 250 Marines in the first year, there is now a 2,500-person air-ground task force.
A 20-year-old US Marine has been charged with rape and assault after being arrested in the Northern Territory on Monday
A US defense spokesman said the Marines were assisting NT Police with the investigation.
The spokesperson said that the US Defense Force ‘will not tolerate this type of behavior and is committed to enforcing high standards of good order and discipline, and upholding justice and the rule of law,” he said.
The Marine base at Robertson Barracks is said to have been closed.
None of the 150 U.S. military personnel can leave the base to receive visitors, under what the spokesman called a “restricted status” on the base.
The Americans were due to leave Darwin in October after the joint Predators Run exercise.
Predators Run was the NT’s largest Australian-led military exercise but came to a tragic conclusion when three Marines were killed in a crash.
U.S. Marine Corps crew chief Corporal Spencer Collart, 21, pilot Capt. Eleanor LeBeau, 29, and Major Tobin Lewis, 37, died when their Boeing MV-22B Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft crashed to the ground and caught fire at the remote Melville Island, 80 km north of Darwin in late August.
No Australian members were involved.
In addition to Australian and American troops, Indonesia, East Timor and the Philippines also took part in the training.
The Robertson Barracks, where 150 US Marines are stationed, was placed on lockdown following the arrest