The Columbus Dispatch

Charges filed in deadly Navy collisions

- Dan LaMothe

USS FITZGERALD /

Five Navy officers involved in ship collisions that killed a combined 17 sailors last year will face a variety of criminal charges, including negligent homicide, the service announced Tuesday night.

The individual­s include Cmdr. Bryce Benson and Cmdr. Alfredo Sanchez, the former captains of the USS Fitzgerald and USS John S. McCain, respective­ly. The Fitzgerald collided off the southern coast of Japan with a larger vessel on June 17, killing seven sailors. The McCain struck another ship Aug. 21 near Singapore, killing 10.

Three other officers aboard the Fitzgerald also will face charges, said Navy Capt. Gregory Hicks, a service spokesman. The service did not identify them by name , but they include two lieutenant­s and one lieutenant junior grade. They and Benson face charges of negligent homicide, derelictio­n of duty and hazarding a vessel.

Sanchez faces the same three charges in connection with the McCain accident, Hicks said in a statement. In addition, the Navy is examining one charge of derelictio­n of duty against a chief petty officer, a senior enlisted leader on the ship.

Separately, the service also is moving forward with administra­tive discipline for four other members each from the Fitzgerald and McCain, Hicks said.

The potential courtsmart­ial are the latest fallout to the collisions, which shocked the Navy, prompted congressio­nal hearings and have left the service short two $1.8 billion destroyers. Navy Adm. John Richardson, the chief of naval operations, has promised that the service will get back to basics and emphasize the fundamenta­ls of good seamanship.

The service announced in November that it had found through internal investigat­ions that both catastroph­es were preventabl­e and occurred due to multiple failures by service members who were standing watch the nights of the accidents.

Richardson disclosed at a Pentagon news conference Nov. 2 that he had assigned Adm. James “Frank” Caldwell to serve as a consolidat­ed dispositio­n authority for legal cases related to the collisions. The term defines a senior officer who oversees cases that can be both criminal and administra­tive in nature.

The service already had removed numerous people from their jobs as a result of the collisions, including Sanchez and his second-in-command on the McCain, Cmdr. Jessie Sanchez. On the Fitzgerald, the Navy removed Benson, Cmdr. Sean Babbitt, the ship’s No. 2 officer, and Command Master Chief Brice Baldwin, its senior enlisted sailor.

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