Army medic convicted in desertion case after U.K. arrest

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Army jury convicted Spc. Oliver E. Board after his return from the U.K. to face desertion and fraud-related charges.

Why this matters

The case shows how the military and international law enforcement agencies pursued a service member who left the country while under investigation. It also underscores that additional allegations can remain unresolved even after a court-martial conviction.

A U.S. Army combat medic who fled to the United Kingdom in 2022 while under investigation was convicted this month by a military jury of desertion, larceny, and making a false official statement, according to the Army Office of Special Trial Counsel.

The conviction ended a multiyear effort to return Spc. Oliver E. Board, 33, to military custody.

Board disappeared after the Army charged him with fraudulently obtaining family separation pay, a monthly allowance for families when a service member’s duties keep them apart for more than 30 days.

At the time, Board was also under investigation over lewd communications with a 14-year-old. That charge was later withdrawn after the victim decided not to participate.

A military judge sentenced Board to 326 days in confinement and a $3,925 fine, with an additional 180 days of confinement if the fine is not paid. He also received a bad-conduct discharge.

The Army said Board will serve his sentence at the Midwest Joint Regional Confinement Facility at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

The Metropolitan Police in the United Kingdom arrested Board after receiving tips from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children that linked him to alleged possession and distribution of child pornography in 2024.

In December 2025, Board was returned to U.S. military custody and later was court-martialed at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, on the desertion and other charges. The Army office said the child pornography allegation remains under consideration for a possible second trial.

When Board deserted, he was an activated reservist who was demobilizing from Title 10 orders. The Army recalled him to duty because of the investigation and assigned him to General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital.

The Army Criminal Investigation Division investigated the case, and the office also thanked U.K. law enforcement.

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