Imperial Valley Press

Navy carrier sidelined by virus returns home to San Diego

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San Diego (AP) — The USS Theodore Roosevelt returned home to San Diego on Thursday led by a new captain who came aboard after the previous commanding officer was fired over the handling of a massive COVID-19 outbreak on board.

There were no emotional embraces on the Navy pier typical of such homecoming­s when sailors return after months at sea.

Instead, the crew wearing face coverings disembarke­d one by one and walked to waiting vehicles to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, marking a quiet and sterile end to one of the Navy’s most tumultuous non-combat deployment­s.

The aircraft carrier departed in January with 4,800 crew members. In late March, it pulled into the port at Guam amid a rapidly escalating outbreak. It remained there for 10 weeks as the ship was sanitized and sailors were taken off to be quarantine­d, treated or tested. Over time, more than 1,150 crew members tested positive for the coronaviru­s and one sailor died.

Early on, Capt. Brett Crozier urged his commanders to take faster action to stem the spread of the virus but was removed from his command when his letter was leaked to the San Francisco Chronicle. Then-acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly also resigned over the matter.

The Navy opened an investigat­ion, which found Crozier made serious errors in judgment that worsened the problem. The investigat­ion also determined that the likely source of the coronaviru­s infection was obtained during a port visit in Vietnam in March.

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