Lodi News-Sentinel

Sailor charged with possessing explosives stolen from San Diego Navy destroyer

- By Kristina Davis

SAN DIEGO — A sailor was arrested Tuesday morning on suspicion of possessing 20 military-grade grenades that had been stolen from a San Diegobased Navy destroyer — explosives that were later found abandoned on the side of a freeway in Arizona.

Gunner’s Mate 2nd Class Aaron A. Booker, 31, is charged with one count of possession of stolen explosives in a San Diego federal complaint that was unsealed Tuesday. He was arrested by Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service agents in Great Lakes, Ill., where he is now stationed.

The shipment of 60 MK3A2 concussion hand grenades arrived on Jan. 20, 2016, aboard the USS Pinckney, an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer ported at Naval Base San Diego, according to the complaint. The explosives were packaged 20 to a crate, labeled as “G911 grenades.” Each contains about a half-pound of TNT.

They were stored in a secured locker, with the only access given to gunner’s mates who would daily check the temperatur­e in the unit, authoritie­s said.

About a year later, in February 2017, a routine inventory revealed the bottom crate had a missing seal — and 20 missing grenades.

The 15 sailors who had access at the time were each interviewe­d, and each allowed NCIS agents to search their vehicles and homes. But the searches yielded nothing of use.

Some of the sailors in their interviews, however, indicated Booker had been angry with his commanding officer and entire chain of command aboard the Pinckney because of a previous disciplina­ry matter, according to the complaint.

When the grenades were discovered missing, Booker was in the process of transferri­ng to his new command in Great Lakes.

In March, about a week into his new post, NCIS agents interviewe­d him about the missing explosives. He denied seeing them, opening the crates or having ever trained with them, the complaint states.

About a month later, on April 20, 2017, the grenades turned up — or most of them.

An off-duty Orange County sheriff ’s deputy was driving on Interstate 15 in northwest Arizona and spotted a backpack leaning on a guardrail on the side of the road. The black backpack was standard-issue military with “GM2 Booker” handwritte­n on an inside tag.

 ?? BRYAN CHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Sailors fire 19 gun salutes during the commission­ing ceremony for the destroyer USS Pinckney in May 2004 at Constructi­on Batallion Center, Port Hueneme.
BRYAN CHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Sailors fire 19 gun salutes during the commission­ing ceremony for the destroyer USS Pinckney in May 2004 at Constructi­on Batallion Center, Port Hueneme.

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