Military prosecutor U.S. Army Lt. Col. Jay Morse speaks to a class at the SMU Dedman School of Law in Dallas, Thursday, Nov. 7, 2013. The military prosecutor who won a life sentence for a soldier who massacred 16 Afghan civilians says he tried his best to serve the soldier's victims, many of whom wanted a death sentence. Morse prosecuted Sgt. Robert Bales, who shot 22 people in Afghanistan's Kandahar province in March 2012. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
Groping allegation against Army officer
01:55 - Source: CNN AP

Story highlights

Investigation focuses on alleged incident in 2011

The officer has been suspended from his job, pending the outcome of the probe

NEW: The alleged incident occurred at a training conference on prosecuting sex assault

CNN  — 

The U.S. Army is investigating an allegation that an officer whose job includes training sex crimes prosecutors groped a female lawyer in 2011, an Obama administration official told CNN.

The Army did not name the officer but the official identified him as Lt. Col. Joseph Morse, who has been suspended from his duties as chief of a service-wide legal program based in Virginia.

The Army’s Criminal Investigation Command is investigating and also will look for any other misconduct as a routine part of the probe, according to the official, who was not identified for full attribution due to the ongoing investigation.

An Army spokesman confirmed the probe and said the officer had been suspended, but did not provide any additional information.

The grouping allegedly occurred at a litigation training conference on prosecuting sex assault, the official told CNN.

Stars and Stripes and the Washington Post first reported on the investigation.

Stars and Stripes also reported that Morse was the lead prosecutor in the case against Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who pleaded guilty to the mass murder of 16 Afghan civilians in 2012.

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