A Fort Bragg soldier has been convicted after secretly recording male victims without their consent in multiple incidents spanning months, according to court-martial records.
Specialist Jailine K. Langley, assigned to the 257th Dental Company under the 44th Medical Brigade, pleaded guilty and was convicted March 9, 2026, of two specifications of indecent visual recording.
Court records obtained by The Salty Soldier show the misconduct occurred in separate incidents months apart, rather than a single isolated act.
Between December 1 and December 31, 2024, Langley recorded the private area of a male victim without consent in a private setting. Months later, on March 14, 2025, he carried out a second, separate recording involving another male victim.
Both incidents occurred on Fort Bragg.

The case originally included a separate charge of abusive sexual contact under Article 120, a significantly more serious offense under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. However, that charge does not appear in the final findings.
According to the charge sheet, the specification tied to the Article 120 allegation was heavily redacted by the Office of Special Trial Counsel. The redactions obscure nearly all details of the alleged conduct, making it unclear what specific act Langley was originally accused of.
What is clear is that the Article 120 charge was not part of the final outcome of the case. Langley ultimately pleaded guilty to two specifications of indecent visual recording under Article 120c as part of a plea agreement.
The lack of detail surrounding the original allegation leaves a gap in the public record, as the nature of the alleged abusive sexual contact cannot be independently assessed based on the available documents.
Charges were formally brought in November 2025 following an investigation and referred to a special court-martial in February 2026.
Langley was sentenced to 30 days confinement, reduced to the rank of E-1, and will be discharged from the Army with a bad-conduct discharge.
He entered the Army in August 2022 and had been in service for just over two years at the time of the offenses.
Public records list him as being from Durham, North Carolina.
While the final conviction centers on unlawful recordings, the case reflects repeated misconduct involving multiple victims over time and raises questions about the underlying allegation that was removed prior to the plea.
© 2026 The Salty Soldier. All rights reserved. Reproduction without written consent is strictly prohibited.

