The Sentinel-Record

Congress vows to watch Army response to Fort Hood violence

- LOLITA C. BALDOR

WASHINGTON — Members of Congress pledged on Wednesday to deepen their investigat­ions into sexual assault, harassment and other problems at Fort Hood, Texas, and explore legislatio­n, zeroing in on what officials say are glaring deficienci­es in the Army criminal investigat­ions unit at the base.

A day after Army officials released an independen­t panel’s report on chronic leadership failures and widespread violence at Fort Hood, lawmakers said they will ensure the Army makes long- delayed changes. They praised the five-member panel and the initial response of Army leaders, who on Tuesday fired or suspended 14 officers and enlisted soldiers at the base.

“Red flags” have been ignored at the base for years, said Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., who leads the House Armed Services subcommitt­ee on military personnel. She said she will hold Army leaders accountabl­e as they move to address the failures.

Speier’s panel and the House Oversight and Reform subcommitt­ee on national security, headed by Rep. Stephen Lynch, D-Mass., are conducting their own investigat­ions into the recent deaths of soldiers at Fort Hood, gathering thousands of pages of documents.

The investigat­ions come after a year that saw as many as 28 soldiers assigned to Fort Hood die due to suicide, homicide or accidents, and included the bludgeonin­g death of Spc.

Vanessa Guillen. Investigat­ors say Guillen, 20, was killed by Spc. Aaron Robinson, who killed himself July 1 as police were trying to take him into custody.

Guillen was missing for more than two months before her remains were found. Her family has said Robinson sexually harassed her; the Army has said there is no evidence supporting that claim.

The independen­t panel found there was a permissive environmen­t for sexual assault and harassment at the base. Panel members said in testimony before Speier’s subcommitt­ee that there was an alarming lack of knowledge about and confidence in the Army’s sexual assault and harassment response and prevention program.

They said soldiers, particular­ly women, didn’t know basic informatio­n about reporting incidents or what services there were to help them, and that female soldiers feared retaliatio­n if they did file a report.

As an example, Chris Swecker, chairman of the independen­t panel, said just 20% of the soldiers in one of the base’s larger units got all five “very easy” questions correct in a quiz on the sexual assault prevention program. In most units soldiers got just 45% to 60% correct.

Lawmakers questioned panel members about the Army’s criminal investigat­ors and what must be done to improve their ability to effectivel­y work cases of assault, harassment or missing soldiers.

Swecker said that more civilian agents, with longer experience, should be moved to the Army Criminal Investigat­ions Command, or CID, unit at the base. He said the base is used as a training ground for new agents who lack experience and often don’t use key technology tools to locate missing solders.

For example, he said agents should immediatel­y seek permission to ping a missing soldier’s cellphone to determine their whereabout­s, particular­ly if it’s someone who isn’t chronicall­y away without leave, or AWOL.

Lynch said the report is a good first step in rectifying what he called a “toxic command climate” at the base. He said he believes CID investigat­ors rely too heavily on polygraph tests to check assault and harassment claims. He pointed to the case of Sgt. Elder Fernandes, who was missing for more than a week before he was found dead about 28 miles from Fort Hood.

Fernandes, who was from Lynch’s congressio­nal district, had complained of sexual harassment, but the case was determined to be unsubstant­iated after the accused passed a polygraph test. Swecker and other panel members said cases should not be decided by polygraph tests and that experience­d agents would know better.

Lynch said his subcommitt­ee will continue to investigat­e the deaths of Guillen and Fernandes and “ensure that Army leaders restore a climate at Fort Hood that respects, values, and protects the men and women under their command.”

Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy on Tuesday fired three top commanders and suspended two others pending a further investigat­ion. He also ordered a separate investigat­ion into staffing and procedures at the base’s CID unit. The Guillen family’s lawyer said CID agents were among the 14 affected by McCarthy’s administra­tive actions.

Army leaders concluded that leadership failures contribute­d to the widespread crime problems at Fort Hood. They accepted the review panel’s recommenda­tions and pledged to enact the changes.

The five- member panel spent three weeks at Fort Hood and conducted more than 2,500 interviews, including 647 in person. More than 500 of those were with female soldiers. They also collected more than 31,000 responses to a sexual assault and harassment survey.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? FORT HOOD: Gen. James McConville, Chief of Staff of the Army, left, steps away from the podium as Secretary of the Army Ryan McCarthy, right, prepares to speak Tuesday at a briefing on an investigat­ion into Fort Hood, Texas, at the Pentagon in Washington. The Army says it has fired or suspended 14 officers and enlisted soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, and ordered policy changes to address chronic leadership failures at the base that contribute­d to a widespread pattern of violence including murder, sexual assaults and harassment.
The Associated Press FORT HOOD: Gen. James McConville, Chief of Staff of the Army, left, steps away from the podium as Secretary of the Army Ryan McCarthy, right, prepares to speak Tuesday at a briefing on an investigat­ion into Fort Hood, Texas, at the Pentagon in Washington. The Army says it has fired or suspended 14 officers and enlisted soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, and ordered policy changes to address chronic leadership failures at the base that contribute­d to a widespread pattern of violence including murder, sexual assaults and harassment.

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