Two former soldiers have been acquitted of raping Corporal Anne-Marie Ellement, who was later found hanged in her barracks.
Cpl Ellement died at Bulford Barracks in Wiltshire on 9 October 2011, almost two years after alleging she was raped by two soldiers while stationed in Germany.
Thomas Fulton and Jeremy Jones, both 28, insisted she had engaged in a consensual threesome after drinking with them in the corporals' mess at the camp in Sennelager on 19 November 2009.
Witnesses described how Fulton, Jones and Cpl Ellement began flirting with each other and were kissing and touching as the evening wore on.
Fulton and Jones were heard discussing a threesome, which Fulton later suggested to Cpl Ellement, then aged 28.
They went upstairs to Jones's room at about 12.30am, where both men had sex with Cpl Ellement. Afterwards, they headed for a nightclub, leaving her behind at the barracks.
Cpl Ellement was later found naked apart from a brown cardigan outside her accommodation at 1.37am. She was said to be in an "extreme state of distress" and immediately alleged she had been raped and sexually assaulted.
A seven-strong board of civil servants and senior military officers at Bulford Court Martial Centre found both Fulton and Jones not guilty of two charges of raping Cpl Ellement, who served in the Royal Military Police.
Following the verdicts, Judge Jeff Blackett told the defendants: "Your conduct on 20 November was disgraceful.
"After engaging in sex you effectively discarded her while you decided to go off to town without a thought for how she might be feeling or how she might get back to her accommodation safely."
The verdicts follow a lengthy fight for justice by Cpl Ellement's family, as the case was originally dismissed in 2010.
In March 2014, coroner Nicholas Rhinberg said the "lingering mental effects" of the alleged rape were a factor in Cpl Ellement's suicide.
Mr Rhinberg found she believed she had been raped and was strongly affected by the "deeply humiliating experience".
His comments followed the second inquest into Cpl Ellement's death, which took place after her family used Article 2 of the Human Rights Act to demand a fresh hearing.
The family, represented by Liberty, also fought for a fresh investigation into the rape allegations against Fulton, from Chester, and Jones, from Carmarthenshire.
The case was later investigated by the RAF Police, who worked with civilian officers from Bedfordshire Police and the Crown Prosecution Service.
Fulton and Jones, who left the Army in 2014 and 2013 respectively, were each charged with two counts of rape in October last year and their trial began on 11 April.
Emma Norton, a lawyer for Liberty, said afterwards Cpl Ellement's family "respected and accepted" the verdicts and wished to thank all those involved in the investigation for their efforts.
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