The Day

Lawmakers: Coast Guard has impeded racism probe

- By ANA RADELAT

Washington — Two House committee chairmen investigat­ing racial discrimina­tion and harassment at the Coast Guard Academy accused the service on Monday of impeding their probe and demanded two officers appear for interviews before their panels.

U.S. Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, and Rep. Bennie Thompson, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said their staff members, as well as staff from the office of Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, met last week with Coast Guard officials as part of their investigat­ion into allegation­s of discrimina­tion, harassment and bullying of cadets at the school in New London, as well as racial discrimina­tion.

In a letter Monday to Coast Guard Adm. Karl L. Schultz, the lawmakers said the Coast Guard officials “indicated that pursuant to (Schultz’s) orders, all of the Coast Guard personnel who were present at the meeting were directed to refuse to answer any questions regarding any past events at the Academy involving either faculty or cadets.”

“We are deeply troubled by what appear to be repeated efforts by the Coast Guard to impede our investigat­ion of the handling of allegation­s of harassment and retaliatio­n at the Coast Guard Academy,” wrote Cummings, D-Md., and Thompson, D-Miss.

The Coast Guard Academy did not have an immediate response to the lawmakers’ letter.

Kurt Colella, dean of the Coast Guard Academy’s Academics Division, and other officials from the school and the Coast Guard were at last week’s meeting with the lawmakers’ staffers.

The lawmakers demanded that Colella and Rear Adm. Anthony J. Vogt, commander of the Thirteenth Coast Guard District, appear before their committees no later than Sept. 18.

“If either individual fails to appear as requested, we will be forced to consider alternativ­e means to

obtain compliance,” the lawmakers wrote, indicating they could use their subpoena power.

The request for the closeddoor interviews means questions posed by committee members and staffers, and the answers, will be transcribe­d. Under such arrangemen­ts, witnesses typically are under oath, and could face punishment if found to have lied.

Courtney said Monday he supports the move taken by Cummings and Thompson.

Courtney said members of the Government Oversight and Homeland Security committee have been “screaming at the top of their lungs” for informatio­n about racial disparitie­s, gender disparitie­s and bullying of all types of cadets, and have received little response.

“We’ve been at the table with Coast Guard staff at every step of the chronology,” he said. “It obviously did not move the ball forward or move the needle.”

The lawmakers have been investigat­ing the Coast Guard Academy for more than a year.

On June 13, 2018, they requested “all documents, including convening authority memoranda, investigat­ive reports, panel sheets, final action memoranda, and post-investigat­ion talking points, regarding allegation­s of harassment or bullying made by any student or faculty member at the Academy during the past three years, the results of any investigat­ions conducted to examine these allegation­s, and the terms of any settlement­s reached.”

In their letter to Shultz, the lawmakers said they received heavily redacted informatio­n, and that the Coast Guard missed deadlines and gave them additional heavily redacted documents in response to new requests for informatio­n.

The lawmakers also cited a Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General report, released in December, that found that a black, female officer at the academy “was retaliated against on the basis of her complaints, in violation of the Military Whistleblo­wer Protection Act.”

“The OIG’s report also identified ‘potential disparitie­s’ and inconsiste­ncies in the handling of harassment complaints at the Academy,” the lawmakers wrote.

But their investigat­ion of the Coast Guard Academy was initiated much earlier, provoked by complaints of bullying and harassment of minority cadets at the school and by its poor grades on the “Equity Scorecard,” a study by the Center for Urban Education at the University of Southern California that tracks academic data, including graduation rates, by race, ethnicity and gender.

The Equity Scorecard reported that “black/African American cadets have been consistent­ly less likely to graduate than the all-cadet average.”

The scorecard also said black cadets suffered from a disproport­ionately high share of disciplina­ry actions.

Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy have also looked into complaints of racism and other abusive behavior at the academy.

“I fully support the U.S. House of Representa­tives’ efforts to exercise its oversight authority of the Coast Guard Academy,” Blumenthal said. “The Coast Guard’s handling of past racial discrimina­tion and harassment allegation­s at the Academy are deeply disturbing – which is why I have repeatedly pressed the Academy to take action.”

Blumenthal also said “I expect immediate, thorough, and transparen­t steps to change this atmosphere of racial hostility and hold Academy staff and officers accountabl­e for their actions.”

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