SNOWFLAKE French pilot sues after he was shot at on firing range in extreme hazing ritual

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
A French military pilot has filed a legal complaint after he was subjected to a brutal hazing ritual on a Corsican airbase. The recruit says he was tied up and left on a training range as planes poured fire down around him.

The recruit, a man in his 30s, was posted to Solenzara Air Base on the island of Corsica in 2019. Arriving on the island that March, he was given no time to enjoy the balmy Corsican spring. Instead, he claims he was treated with suspicion and hostility by his new comrades, and hours after arrival was subjected to the most hair-raising hazing ritual imaginable.

The man allegedly had his ankles, knees, and wrists taped together, and a hood slipped over his head, before he was loaded into the back of a pickup truck “like a potato sack,” according to La Provence. His captors then allegedly drove him onto a live-fire range and tied him to a post, where he remained trapped as fighter jets hammered targets around him with bullets and bombs.

After 20 minutes under the barrage, he was bundled back into the truck and brought back to base.

The details of the case were revealed by the man’s lawyers earlier this week, in a legal complaint brought in Marseille. “He was faced with a risk of death or serious injury due to his transport conditions and the intimidation he suffered on the firing range,” the complaint, first reported on by La Provence, reads. “The shots exerted by the fighter planes... could have injured him very seriously or killed him. Moreover, the simulated shots in his direction could have, because of an error, a safety oversight, become real.”

Photos shared with La Provence show the man bound and hooded in the truck bed, and tied to a vertical steel beam below a pockmarked target.
The French Ministry of Defense told La Provence that an internal investigation was launched and the airmen responsible were disciplined.

Hazing rituals are commonplace in military and law enforcement organizations worldwide, as well as US college fraternities, and the term spans everything from mild pranks to outright assault. While the pilot in Corsica underwent a horrifying ordeal, he emerged with his life, unlike a young trainee at the prestigious Saint-Cyr military academy in 2012. The recruit, Jallal Hami, drowned as he attempted to cross a swamp carrying a full load of equipment in the middle of the night, as his tormentors played Richard Wagner’s ‘Ride of the Valkyries’ over speakers.
Three of the soldiers involved were convicted of manslaughter and given suspended sentences earlier this year.

 

ArisenCarcass

Veteran Member
I'll just bet, that if they had actually shot AT him, that they would have escaped the lawsuits......since they were good enough to not hit him while destroying targets around him, they easily could have hit him.
I'll bet this snowflake was an ass and this hazing was probably for bad-mouthing the unit or its members, IMO.

It is kinda like the SpecOps room clearing drills with live ammo and live bystanders in the room with the targets.......
It shows that your bretheren know what they are doing, and that you have to develop and maintain a high level of skill to be admitted and remain part of the unit.

I understand that many have irrational hate for the French, but they have a long and storied military history.
They have a professional force with some very good units here and there, and a large amount of honor.
It is sad that they are following US down.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
I'll just bet, that if they had actually shot AT him, that they would have escaped the lawsuits......since they were good enough to not hit him while destroying targets around him, they easily could have hit him.
I'll bet this snowflake was an ass and this hazing was probably for bad-mouthing the unit or its members, IMO.

It is kinda like the SpecOps room clearing drills with live ammo and live bystanders in the room with the targets.......
It shows that your bretheren know what they are doing, and that you have to develop and maintain a high level of skill to be admitted and remain part of the unit.

I understand that many have irrational hate for the French, but they have a long and storied military history.
They have a professional force with some very good units here and there, and a large amount of honor.
It is sad that they are following US down.
How do you explain it happening "within hours" of his arrival on base? You'd have to have one heck of a terrible reputation for it to preceed you with that intensity!

Summerthyme
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
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No, that is not how unit cohesion is built.

Heh

The good units I was in always did something to the new guys to see what they were made of.

Every guy that went through it and didn't wimp out was invariably the type that you could depend on. They would be the ones that made $#it happen, even if the situation sucked. This even applied to line-doggies who were dumber than a post...if they dealt with the initial crap and soldiered on, you could count on them doing their part.

The ones that whined and pissed and moaned about it...somebody ended up carrying their load at some point.


Units that didn't have fine traditions like this were just there.

Things got done and the minimums were met, but there was no real unit pride.
 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
After a quick search online, apparently Solenzara Air Base (which by the way was originally built by the US during the Second World War) is both a tactical training center for NATO and home to a helicopter squadron flying Aérospatiale SA 330 Puma helicopters. Between the location and the roles in the French Air Force that model are used in (SAR and air assault), the possibility that there is a "special forces culture" component to this incident is highly likely (particularly since the Legion's HQ is on Corsica as well).
 

9idrr

Veteran Member
A French military pilot has filed a legal complaint after he was subjected to a brutal hazing ritual on a Corsican airbase. The recruit says he was tied up and left on a training range as planes poured fire down around him.

The recruit, a man in his 30s, was posted to Solenzara Air Base on the island of Corsica in 2019. Arriving on the island that March, he was given no time to enjoy the balmy Corsican spring. Instead, he claims he was treated with suspicion and hostility by his new comrades, and hours after arrival was subjected to the most hair-raising hazing ritual imaginable.

The man allegedly had his ankles, knees, and wrists taped together, and a hood slipped over his head, before he was loaded into the back of a pickup truck “like a potato sack,” according to La Provence. His captors then allegedly drove him onto a live-fire range and tied him to a post, where he remained trapped as fighter jets hammered targets around him with bullets and bombs.

After 20 minutes under the barrage, he was bundled back into the truck and brought back to base.

The details of the case were revealed by the man’s lawyers earlier this week, in a legal complaint brought in Marseille. “He was faced with a risk of death or serious injury due to his transport conditions and the intimidation he suffered on the firing range,” the complaint, first reported on by La Provence, reads. “The shots exerted by the fighter planes... could have injured him very seriously or killed him. Moreover, the simulated shots in his direction could have, because of an error, a safety oversight, become real.”

Photos shared with La Provence show the man bound and hooded in the truck bed, and tied to a vertical steel beam below a pockmarked target.
The French Ministry of Defense told La Provence that an internal investigation was launched and the airmen responsible were disciplined.

Hazing rituals are commonplace in military and law enforcement organizations worldwide, as well as US college fraternities, and the term spans everything from mild pranks to outright assault. While the pilot in Corsica underwent a horrifying ordeal, he emerged with his life, unlike a young trainee at the prestigious Saint-Cyr military academy in 2012. The recruit, Jallal Hami, drowned as he attempted to cross a swamp carrying a full load of equipment in the middle of the night, as his tormentors played Richard Wagner’s ‘Ride of the Valkyries’ over speakers.
Three of the soldiers involved were convicted of manslaughter and given suspended sentences earlier this year.

Don't know how it is now but we had to low crawl under live fire from M60 in Basic and AIT.
And, what with him bein' a pilot who's probably gonna provide close coverin' air support, it's a good idea for him to know what the grunts feel like when rounds are comin' out of the sky. :)
 

mikeabn

Finally not a lurker!
Heh

The good units I was in always did something to the new guys to see what they were made of.

Every guy that went through it and didn't wimp out was invariably the type that you could depend on. They would be the ones that made $#it happen, even if the situation sucked. This even applied to line-doggies who were dumber than a post...if they dealt with the initial crap and soldiered on, you could count on them doing their part.

The ones that whined and pissed and moaned about it...somebody ended up carrying their load at some point.


Units that didn't have fine traditions like this were just there.

Things got done and the minimums were met, but there was no real unit pride.
Doing something is different than putting someone downrange.
 

mikeabn

Finally not a lurker!
Don't know how it is now but we had to low crawl under live fire from M60 in Basic and AIT.
And, what with him bein' a pilot who's probably gonna provide close coverin' air support, it's a good idea for him to know what the grunts feel like when rounds are comin' out of the sky. :)
Training like that is not the same as hazing.
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
I seriously doubt he was in an impact area.

More likely, dude was under the point where they were firing...maybe just forward of it.

Nobody goes into impact areas, they are minefields with unexploded ordinance.
 
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