Posted on Dec 16, 2016
What was the strangest Recruit you had ever seen?
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This is for all you Recruiters and Drill Sergeants. What was the strangest Recruit you had seen cross your path.
Posted in these groups: Recruiter Drill Sergeant
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 48
Besides the young lady that admitted to using a snake as a dildo at MEPS?
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MSgt (Join to see)
7 y
When I was Liaison at MEPS, we had female start an orgy at the hotel. But that's not what got her dq'd. She showed up at MEPS sloppy drunk. She was supposed to ship out for BMT. MY Pro-Sup was pissed!!!!!
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Posted >1 y ago
He wasn't mine, belonged to my Marine buddy across the hall, but I'd go with the kid who was told to remove his ear and nose piercings before going to MEPS but didn't think that applied to his nipple and testicle piercings and chains. DQ'd.
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LCpl Dan McTiernan
7 y
AN Eric Lewis - Agreed, I believe that in the Marine Corps we would have assigned him an mos associated with "target".
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Erick Ruiz
7 y
AN Eric Lewis - im pretty sure anything in the 11 series in the Army would've been a great fit, or EOD.
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SFC Joseph Weber
>1 y
CSM Charles Hayden - the nipple and testicle piercings were connected to each other
by small chains.
by small chains.
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Posted >1 y ago
A guy signed up with a woody woodpecker tattoo on his face! Seriously right on his left cheekbone, and he was able to get in with a waiver.
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SGT (Join to see)
7 y
I worked for the Kansas department of corrections for 2 and a half years. And have friends and family that work/worked at USP Leavenworth. This is one of the things we look for.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peckerwood
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peckerwood
Peckerwood (or simply wood) is a Southern US slang term for woodpecker. It is used to describe poor rural whites similar to white trash. Originally an ethnic slur, the term has been embraced by a subculture related to prison gangs and outlaw motorcycle clubs.[1][2][3][4] The origin of the word comes from the Southern African-American dialect version of woodpecker circa 1825–1935. Folklore in the 1920s used the word as a symbolic contrast to...
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