UNDAUNTED GLADIATOR: Colonel Dan Wilson’s Epic Fight for Justice After False Accusations Shattered a Legendary Marine Career

In Undaunted Gladiator, Colonel Dan Wilson recounts his epic fight for justice after false accusations shattered his distinguished Marine career, revealing shocking flaws in the military justice system and the power of unwavering faith.

Imagine a battle-hardened Marine Colonel—39 years of service, 11 deployments, Bronze Star, Legion of Merit, three Meritorious Service Medals, two Combat Action Ribbons, and a life forged in the crucible of Africa’s wilds and Iraq’s fiercest firefights—falsely accused of raping a child at a simple dinner party. Relieved of duties, dragged through a 14-month “witch hunt,” thrown into pretrial confinement, convicted in a politically charged court-martial, and locked away in the brig for 33 brutal months. That’s not fiction. That’s the jaw-dropping true story at the heart of Undaunted Gladiator by Colonel Dan Wilson.

From his missionary childhood in Sudan, Kenya, South Africa and Namibia—learning to track game with Bushmen, speaking seven languages, and climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro at 14—Wilson was destined for the Corps. He enlisted in 1981, graduated Boot Camp as Platoon and Series Honor Man, earned meritorious promotions to Sergeant in just 16 months, and rose as a “Mustang” infantry officer. He commanded four platoons, three companies, and four battalions; fought in Desert Storm and the Second Battle of Fallujah; briefed generals in the Pentagon; and served as G-3 Operations Officer for II MEF. Decorated 52 times, he lived the Marine ethos: “Semper Fi” wasn’t a slogan—it was his heartbeat.

Then came the dinner party implosion on 13 July 2016. A junior officer’s wife accused him of inappropriately touching her six-year-old daughter. NCIS launched a global fishing expedition, storming his home several times, interrogating his terrified wife, and stacking 27 charges. A second accuser emerged months later with her own wild claims. Wilson was relieved of duties, confined for seven months pretrial, and ultimately convicted on the child sexual abuse charge plus lesser misconduct counts. Sentenced to five-and-a-half years, he entered the brig wearing orange, Prisoner #00128660 Whisky Delta—Cell #13.

What follows is pure fire. Wilson doesn’t break—he rises. He finds God in the darkness (“be like that tree!”), turns to daily prayer and meditation, forges unbreakable bonds with fellow prisoners (the “finest Marines I ever served with”), and watches his brilliant civilian appellate lawyer, Katie Cherkasky, dismantle the case. On 1 July 2019, the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals delivers a stunning unanimous reversal, and rebuke to the generals who convicted him—“set aside with prejudice”—the rarest of victories. A double rainbow appears over Camp Pendleton that same weekend. Divine confirmation.

Yet the system wasn’t done. Wilson signs a “dirty deal” under duress for release: voluntary retirement in exchange for “no punishment.” The convening authority reneges. He’s retired in the pay of a Lieutenant Colonel with an “Other-Than-Honorable” characterization of his very honorable service—losing $5,000+ monthly in benefits for life, banned from all Marine Corps bases for life. The very policies meant to protect victims weaponized against an innocent warrior.

Undaunted Gladiator isn’t just a memoir—it’s a clarion call. Wilson exposes how #MeToo zeal, unlawful command influence, and a “believe the female accuser at all costs” culture have corrupted military justice. He names the rot: NCIS overreach, stacked charges, biased panels, and careerist generals protecting the institution over truth. But he also shows the light—unshakable faith in God, family loyalty (his wife and daughters earn “Medals of Honor”). Post-release, he lives the “Life of Riley” in Myrtle Beach—writing, mentoring, working out, and playing Pickleball daily. He has published eight books, produced a music album and is working on finishing up three more books.

Wilson’s message rings eternal: “Everything happens for a reason.” His Higher Power whom he calls God, guided him through hell to emerge stronger, calling readers to demand reform so no other patriot suffers the same fate. Raw, riveting, and redemptive, this book will leave you furious at the system, inspired by the man, and moved to tears by the love that carried him.

If you believe in truth, justice, and the Marine Corps we all swore to defend—read Undaunted Gladiator. Buy it. Share it. Join the fight to fix what’s broken. Semper Fi, Colonel. Your story isn’t over—it’s just beginning.

https://a.co/d/09C79nxI

The Eve of the Real Desert Storm…23 February 1991…Thirty-five years ago tonight!

The day before the ground invasion, our Operations Officer (callsign Dealer) asked me to mark the route to the first obstacle belt in Kuwait with chem lights that were only visible to our forces. Mission accomplished and we got our final briefing from the intel weanies who knew nothing. I gave my Marines the real gouge on the warrior prowess of Arab forces…they have none, simply put!

The real start of Desert Storm was the ground invasion of Kuwait by us grunts on 24 February 1991. Here’s what my Heavy Machine Gun Platoon (1st Battalion, 5th Marines, Task Force Ripper, 1st Marine Division) did that day…from my book, OUT OF AFRICA AND INTO THE CORPS:

On February 23rd, 1991, Dealer called out to me and asked that I mark a route for our battalion to the first obstacle belt. I grabbed Sergeant Jenkins’ section. One of his superb Squad Leaders was Corporal Tod Shores. We found a suitable route to the point in the obstacle belt that was 1/5’s designated penetration point. On the way back to our battalion’s position, we emplaced infrared chem-lights, making them only visible to our eyes, traveling from south to north and not to any enemy eyes looking to the south from the north. We accomplished the mission and made it back to our platoon area about 1700. In just seven hours, our battalion was to begin movement to our attack positions at 0001 on 24 February 1991.

In the final briefing by our intelligence analysts, they predicted that we would face fierce opposition from the Iraqi troops in Kuwait and predicted thirty percent casualties in the fight through the obstacle belts.

When they departed, I told my Marines of Heavy Machine Gun Platoon that I felt the intel guys were full of shit. “My dad used to joke about the shortest book in the world being of Arab war heroes,” I said. “I grew up for a good chunk of my life around Arabs. My experience is that when faced with danger, they are cowards unless they are hyped up on drugs, like methamphetamines. My personal assessment is that when faced with United States Marines, they will quickly surrender and throw up white flags. How we perform in battle will reverberate through eternity. We will prevail and be heading home soon to tell our war stories back home. Our road home is through Kuwait. The faster we get this done, the faster we go home to our families and the land of ‘milk and honey.’ Our reputation precedes us into battle, warriors. Let us not disappoint our legendary Marine heroes on whose shoulders we stand today. When God is for us, no one can stand against us, and I am certain that God is with us. We will fight, fight, fight, crush our enemies, and see them driven before us.’” I then directed our Marines to “suit up at MOPP Level 2.” From our training in Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical (NBC) warfare, we know that MOPP stands for Mission Oriented Protective Posture and the various levels are to protect military members. MOPP Level 2 is actually putting on and wearing the chemical suit that is worn over our uniforms along with the overboots. We were each issued a single suit that we put on, carrying our gas masks and gloves on our person. This combo was worn for the next four days. It was hot and sweaty…very uncomfortable but had to be worn.

A 110 Percent Mentality

“January 18, 2022. I stepped on the scale: 309 pounds.
Two years earlier I had retired from the Marine Corps after 39 years of staying under 220.
I had become what I used to discharge Marines for.
That morning I made a decision: I would attack my body the same way I attacked every mission in the Corps—with a 110% mentality.
110 pounds later I’m 199 pounds, have a six-pack at 63, and feel better than I did at 35.
If a hard-charging Marine can do it after retirement, you can too.
My book shows you exactly how.”

From 309 Pounds to a Six-Pack at Age 63: Retired Marine Colonel Drops 110 Pounds Using the Same 110% Mentality That Forged U.S. Marines

“Marines don’t give 100%. Marines give 110%!”

That scream from Drill Instructor Sergeant Antoinette still echoes in Colonel Dan Hunter Wilson’s head—nearly 45 years later. In January 2022, the 6’3” retired Colonel stepped on the scale and saw 309 pounds. The man who once ran a perfect 300 on the Marine Corps PFT, led Marines in Fallujah, and retired as the senior Colonel in the Corps had eaten himself into obesity in under two years.

He didn’t make excuses.

He didn’t buy pills.

He didn’t get surgery.

He simply decided to attack his body the same way he attacked every mission in 39 years of active duty—with his 110% mentality.

The result?

110 pounds gone.

Cholesterol from 235 to 171.

Blood pressure from 185/121 to 106/75.

Resting heart rate in the 40s.

A visible six-pack at 63.

And a book that is already changing lives.

A 110 Percent Mentality: My 110-Pound Weight Loss Journey is not another diet book.

It’s a battle plan written by a warrior who refused to stay soft.

Inside you’ll discover:

The exact “Daniel Diet” (yes, straight from the Bible) that Colonel Wilson used—vegetables + lean protein + portion control that tastes so good cheating never tempts you

The Basic Daily Routine that rebuilt his body, mind, and spirit (includes a 5-minute ice bath at 42–45°F every morning for unbreakable discipline)

The wake-up run + garage circuit + 2 hours of Pickleball + iron + wind sprints schedule that melted fat while building muscle

How he used faith, accountability, and ruthless consistency to power through every plateau

The same leadership principles he used to turn civilians into Marines—now applied to turning your body into a fighting machine

This is NOT theory.

This is a retired Colonel who packed his seabag for 39 years, led in combat, trained thousands of Marines, and then proved the same principles work in retirement when the stakes were his own life.

He lost the weight slow and steady (never more than 10 lbs a month) so his skin tightened naturally—no loose skin, no Ozempic face, just lean, hard, Marine-ready muscle.

And now he wants to help you do the same.

Ready to stop making excuses and start making progress?

Grab your copy of A 110 Percent Mentality right now and begin your own transformation today:

Buy on Amazon (Paperback)

Kindle/eBook version

One reader already lost 42 pounds in 90 days using the plan.

Your story could be next.

Semper Fi and 110%—let’s get after it.

— Colonel Dan Hunter Wilson

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

A 110 Percent Mentality