A former London military medic will face his third court martial Monday, on charges of sexual assault and breach of trust.

Former petty officer James Wilks, whose job was mainly to screen people seeking to join Canada’s military, is accused of fondling women during medical exams at recruiting centres in London and Thunder Bay between 2005 and 2009.

The military trial is scheduled to last three weeks and take place in Gatineau, a spokesperson for the Department of National Defence said Friday.

Lawyer Phil Millar, who represents one of the women in a civil case, said he will attend the trial’s first day and when his client testifies.

He said he has secured settlements with DND in “four or five” cases related to earlier courts ­martial.

Some of the women serving in the military told superiors of their experiences but no investigation of their complaints ensued at the time, Millar alleges. “I’d like to see some of the bosses, who these complaints were made to, get disciplined.”

Wilks joined the Canadian Forces in April 1984 as a medical assistant. In 2001, he was posted as a medical assistant at the Canadian Forces recruiting centre in Thunder Bay. From 2007-09, he was a medical technician at the London recruitment office.

His job was to provide basic health screening for applicants to the reserve and regular forces and, on occasion, to those already serving in the military.

In other courts martial, some women testified Wilks did breast examinations without telling the women that it wasn’t a necessary or authorized part of the screening process.

The charges in these proceedings — seven breaches of trust and one of sexual assault — are alleged to have happened between 2004 and 2009.

Wilks was released from the Canadian Forces on medical grounds in April 2011, just before the first charges went before a military judge.

Wilks was found guilty in 2011 of sexually assaulting women in London and Sarnia during medical exams in 2008-09.

In 2012, more women came forward, alleging they were assaulted in London and Thunder Bay between 2003 and 2009.

Wilks was found guilty in September 2013 of 10 counts of sex assault and 15 counts of breach of trust and sentenced to 30 months in prison.

He has appealed that conviction.