Famous victims of cashiering include
Francis Mitchell (1621),
Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald (after the
Great Stock Exchange Fraud of 1814),
Justus McKinstry,
Alfred Dreyfus (1894, see
trial and conviction of Alfred Dreyfus and
Dreyfus affair), and
Philippe Pétain (1945, stripped of all ranks and honors except
Marshal of France).
William Calley, the sole person convicted of the
My Lai Massacre, was cashiered out instead of receiving a
punitive discharge. Following the failure of the
1935 Greek coup d'état attempt,
Lieutenant Colonel Christodoulos Tsigantes, his brother captain
Ioannis Tsigantes, colonel
Stefanos Sarafis and other participants of the coup were cashiered in a public ceremony. While most closely associated with Captain Dreyfus, the ceremony of formal degradation () occurred several times in the French military under the
Third Republic. At least one other army officer and a naval officer were subjected to the ritual of having their swords broken and the insignia, braid and buttons publicly torn from their uniforms, after being found guilty of charges of treason. More commonly, a number of NCOs and private soldiers underwent similar punishments for committing various serious offenses, before execution or imprisonment. The physical acts of ripping away insignia and breaking swords could be made easier by some prior preparation. A contemporary account in
The New York Times of the Dreyfus cashiering in 1894 says: To prepare for stripping the prisoner of his insignia of rank, the prison tailor yesterday removed all the buttons and stripes from Dreyfus' tunic, the red stripes from his trousers and the regimental number and braid from his collar and cap. These were all replaced with a single stitch so that they could be torn away readily. The condemned man's sword was also filed almost in two, in order that it might be easily broken. The
Adjutant's quick movement and apparent effort in breaking the sword was consequently mere pretense, as only a mere touch was necessary. In the 1964 film
Mary Poppins, Mr Banks is cashiered when he is fired from the bank. This involved his flower carnation torn from his lapel, his umbrella being turned inside out and his bowler hat being punched through. In the 1942
Bugs Bunny short,
Fresh Hare, Bugs cashiers
Elmer Fudd as a disgrace to the Mounties by tearing away not just his uniform and insignias, but also his undershorts. == See also ==