USA TODAY US Edition

Marines fire chaplain after video of sex act

- Tom Vanden Brook

WASHINGTON – A Navy chaplain was fired last month from his post at a Marine Corps command after he was caught on video having sex with a woman at a pub in New Orleans, USA TODAY has learned.

The Marines fired Navy Capt. Loften Thornton on March 20 for “loss of trust and confidence,” said Marine Lt. Col. Ted Wong, a spokesman for Marine Reserve. Thornton had been chaplain for Marine Forces Reserve based in New Orleans.

Wong declined to discuss what prompted the firing of Thornton, a Navy chaplain since 1992. But two Defense Department officials confirmed that authoritie­s were examining video of

Thornton having sex with a woman at the Crown & Anchor Pub, a Britishthe­med tavern across the Mississipp­i from the French Quarter. They were not authorized to speak on the record because the case is under investigat­ion.

The pub’s owner, Neil Timms, said the incident took place in front of the pub by the road near some picnic tables. Timms is cooperatin­g with authoritie­s, he said. The bar is a five-minute drive from the Marine Reserve facility.

Thornton did not respond to a request for comment, and a Navy official said he was not available.

The Navy provides chaplains for the Marine Corps. Clergy members “are embedded within commands operating at sea and ashore to ensure 24/7 availabili­ty,” according to the Navy’s strategic plan for religious ministry. “They provide a source of comfort and refuge that enables service members and their families to practice and grow in their faith and to face personal and profession­al challenges.”

The Marines have struggled over the past year with sexual misconduct and allegation­s of toxic work environmen­ts. Last year, news broke of the Marines United scandal, in which a private Facebook group of current and former Marines shared often-explicit photos of women without their consent. Several Marines have been courtmarti­aled and others have received lesser punishment, and it prompted a new policy on social media use.

More recently, Gen. Robert Neller, the Marine Corps commandant, ordered a new investigat­ion of sexual harassment allegation­s at its base in Quantico, Va. USA TODAY reported in February that two civilian employees made complaints of sexual harassment against a Marine officer.

In March, Neller ordered the new review to focus on the complaints of Sherry Yetter and Traci Sharpe. They say their concerns about the officer, dating to 2013, were not taken seriously.

In February, Neller fired his top liaison to Congress, Brig. Gen. Norman Cooling, after the Senate Armed Services Committee asked for an investigat­ion of allegation­s that he had created a hostile work environmen­t.

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Loften Thornton

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