Military prosecutors have charged a Marine with sexual assault of a minor after a 14-year-old girl was found in June in the barracks of Camp Pendleton, officials said.
The teen girl was discovered June 28 on the military base, more than two weeks after she went missing from her Spring Valley home.
Relatives of the unidentified minor told The Times they suspect she had been sold to the Marine for sex and said they were concerned officials were trying to cover up the incident.
On Friday, Camp Pendleton officials announced that a Marine has been charged by military prosecutors with sexual assault of a minor but they declined to identify the suspect. Marine officials were not immediately available to say what prison time the marine faced if convicted.
The Marine also faces an unrelated charge of violating liberty restriction, meaning he failed to follow a rule or order about his time off — for example, being limited from leaving an area, or returning to base or barracks by a certain time.
An Aug. 17 preliminary hearing has been scheduled.
A spokesperson for Camp Pendleton said more details regarding the charges could not be released.
Officials said the Marine’s identity would not be released unless the case was referred to a court-martial after the preliminary hearing.
Casaundra Perez, the girl’s aunt, alleged in a previous interview with The Times that her niece was raped on the base, and has criticized how military officials handled the case.
Perez said military police questioned her underage niece without a guardian present and before notifying her guardian that she had been found.
She said investigators suggested her niece had been communicating with the marine and alleged he was her boyfriend, which she has said is false.
“She doesn’t even know the Marine’s name,” she said in a previous interview.
This story originally appeared on LA Times