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Both Van Hise and Nolan are still at Fort Riley. The base's public affairs department tells The Pitch that neither Van Hise nor Nolan nor any higher-ups will comment because of the pending litigation. Welborn retired from the service in February and couldn't be reached for comment.
Hall claims that several officers argued with him about his beliefs and whether his atheism would keep him from being an effective leader. "There was all this bullshit. They ask me a question like, 'What if a soldier's suicidal and you have to pray with him?' I said I'd call a chaplain," Hall says. "Then they'd come back with, 'What if a chaplain's not available?' Come on, can you box me in any tighter? That's a question that you can't answer right."
Fort Riley command, worried that Hall was in danger of being attacked by one of the more fervent Christian soldiers, has sometimes assigned him a guard to accompany him on and off the base.
Hall's lawsuit doesn't ask for money. Eye says Hall's main goal is to prod the military to issue an order that forbids soldiers from discriminating or persecuting non-Christians. "You can't use someone's atheism or religious beliefs as a means to judge their performance. I don't for a moment anticipate the Christian dominionist faction is going to change their views because of that, but I would expect that the chain of command still means something."