The Boston Globe

Coast Guard Academy vows changes after sex-abuse coverup

- By Dan Lamothe

An extensive years-long coverup of sexual abuse allegation­s at the US Coast Guard Academy underscore­s that change is necessary, officials determined, after an internal review affirmed revelation­s that senior leaders worked to downplay the prevalence of such crimes and shield the institutio­n from public scrutiny.

The findings are detailed in a report, released Wednesday, that concludes the military service has created an environmen­t where trust in leadership is eroding and too many personnel lack a safe workplace. It recommends sweeping changes to how service members are held accountabl­e for not only sexual assaults, but also harassment, inappropri­ate jokes, and other bad behavior.

‘‘Every Coast Guard member must adhere to our core values of honor, respect and devotion to duty at all times,’’ the service’s top officer, Admiral Linda Fagan, said.

The internal review was ordered by Fagan, the first woman to lead a military service in the United States, after CNN detailed in July how the service had scrutinize­d years of sexual assault allegation­s but buried the findings, shielding them from Congress and the public.

An associated report was completed in 2020, during the tenure of Fagan’s predecesso­r, Admiral Karl Schultz, and remained secret during Fagan’s first year as commandant, Coast Guard officials later acknowledg­ed. Fagan apologized to lawmakers in July for not making Congress aware of the report, saying that she did not initially know about the totality of its findings.

In the 2020 report, officials said an investigat­ion, codenamed Fouled Anchor, was opened in 2014 after an unidentifi­ed officer disclosed she was raped at the Coast Guard Academy, in New London, Conn., in 1997. The inquiry eventually expanded to examine allegation­s made against 43 people. It uncovered a pattern in which service leaders favored conducting reviews of the claims rather than criminal investigat­ions and said that in 33 of the 43 cases, no action was taken.

Coast Guard officials said in their findings released Wednesday that they visited installati­ons nationwide as part of the review ordered by Fagan.

‘‘You made it very clear to our team that these failures and lack of accountabi­lity are entirely unacceptab­le, and you let us know the Coast Guard must do something about it,’’ senior officials involved in the review wrote.

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