Soldier may have faced harassment
Family says woman told them she could not report allegations
Army specialist Vanessa Guillén was missing for more than 2 months before her remains were found in June.
Army investigators said Friday that Army Spec. Vanessa Guillén, the soldier who was missing for more than two months before her remains were discovered in late June, could have faced some harassment some time before she was killed.
Guillén’s family say she confided in them that she faced sexual harassment before her April 22 disappearance from Fort Hood in Texas, an allegation the Army said it has not substantiated. But investigators said on a call with reporters that she faced “potentially some harassment, not of a sexual nature.”
That potential harassment did not come from people of interest in the investigation, they said, or Spc. Aaron Robinson, the soldier they say killed Guillén before fatally shooting himself June 30 in a confrontation with police. Officials did not say if that potential harassment was sexist or racial in nature.
Robinson became a “party of concern” April 28, six days after Guillén’s disappearance, according to investigators. Guillén and Robinson each worked in arms rooms in nearby buildings, and investigators learned early on that Robinson was among the last witnesses to see her alive, he said.
Guillén, 20, was bludgeoned to death at Fort Hood, near where she was last seen, investigators said. Her disappearance, and her family’s allegations that she was sexually harassed, drew attention from activists, lawmakers, celebrities and other soldiers. Guillén felt she could not raise her allegations with her chain of command, her family said.
Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy said Friday he has directed an independent review of the command climate at Fort Hood in response to the killing.
Investigators defended what they described as a thorough investigation into Guillén’s disappearance and death amid questions from the family on whether the Army moved with enough urgency through more than two months of leads, when developments sometimes took weeks to unfold.
More than 50 law enforcement agents conducted hundreds of interviews and searched dozens of cars and phones, according to an Army official.
Investigators used cellphone data to track Robinson’s phone to a point near the Leon River east of Fort Hood, they have said. On June 21, a burned-out section of ground and scorched trees were discovered, along with a smell of decomposition, an FBI agent wrote in a criminal complaint.
Agents and cadaver dogs did not find a body until nine days later when fence-builders nearby looked around after smelling the odor, investigators said. Her remains were discovered three feet from the burn site, said Tim Miller, director and founder of Texas EquuSearch, a nonprofit that assists in searches and helped on the Guillén case.
Agents unwittingly had stood right on top of the remains in their earlier search, Miller said.
Witnesses told investigators in May that they saw Robinson struggle with a large plastic box on the day of Guillén’s disappearance. Burned remains of a plastic box were found at the site, an investigator said, but he said it seemed of no value at the time.
Robinson’s alleged accomplice and estranged wife of a former Fort Hood soldier, Cecily Aguilar, told investigators she arrived at the spot near the river to find Guillén’s body in the box before they dismembered, attempted to burn and buried her remains encased in concrete. Aguilar was arrested and charged with evidence tampering, authorities said.
After Guillén’s remains were discovered, Robinson “absconded” from his barracks, where he was on lockdown, the FBI said. An official said noncommissioned officers in the unit had “oversight” of Robinson but declined to address how or why Robinson was able to leave, or the nature of the lockdown.