Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. military guns keep vanishing

Some weapons find their way to street gang members, felons

- KRISTIN M. HALL, JAMES LAPORTA, JUSTIN PRITCHARD AND JUSTIN MYERS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jeannie Ohm, Brian Barrett, Randy Herschaft, Jennifer Farrar, Michael Hill and Pia Deshpande of The Associated Press.

In the first public accounting of its kind in decades, an Associated Press investigat­ion has found that at least 1,900 U.S. military firearms were lost or stolen during the 2010s, with some resurfacin­g in violent crimes.

Government records covering the Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Air Force show pistols, machine guns, shotguns and automatic assault rifles have vanished from armories, supply warehouses, Navy warships and elsewhere. These weapons of war disappeare­d because of security problems that had not been publicly reported, including sleeping troops and a surveillan­ce system that didn’t record.

In one case, authoritie­s linked an Army pistol stolen from Fort Bragg, N.C., to four shootings in New York before it was recovered. Another stolen Army pistol was used in a Boston robbery.

Weapon theft or loss spanned the military’s global footprint. In Afghanista­n, someone cut the padlock on an Army container and stole 65 Beretta M9s — the same type of gun recovered in New York. The war-zone theft went undetected for weeks, until empty pistol boxes were discovered in the compound. The weapons were not recovered.

While AP’s focus was on firearms, military explosives also have been lost or stolen, including armor-piercing grenades that ended up in an Atlanta backyard. In that incident and many others, military investigat­ors closed the cases without finding the people responsibl­e.

The Pentagon used to share with Congress annual updates about stolen weapons, but that requiremen­t ended years ago. The Army and the Air Force couldn’t readily tell the AP how many weapons were lost or stolen from 2010 through 2019.

On Tuesday, in the wake of the AP investigat­ion, Army Secretary Christine Wormuth said at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee that she would be open to new oversight over weapons accountabi­lity.

The AP built its own database by reviewing records including hundreds of military criminal case files and data from registries of small arms, as well as internal military analysis. Whenever possible, the AP eliminated cases in which firearms were lost in combat, during accidents such as aircraft crashes and in similar incidents in which a weapon’s fate was known.

From the start of this reporting 10 years ago, the armed services have been slow to share informatio­n. For years, the Army suppressed the release of informatio­n. Unlike the other branches, the Air Force has released no data.

Theft or loss happens more often than the Army has publicly acknowledg­ed. During an initial interview, Brig. Gen. Duane Miller, the Army’s No. 2 law enforcemen­t official, significan­tly understate­d the extent to which weapons disappear, citing records that report only a few hundred missing rifles and handguns. An internal Army analysis that the AP obtained tallied 1,303 firearms.

In a second interview, Miller said he hadn’t been aware of the memos, which had been distribute­d throughout the Army, until the AP pointed them out. Army officials later said the total is imprecise because it includes some recovered guns and may include duplicates.

Like Miller, top officials with the Marines and the secretary of defense’s office said weapon accountabi­lity is a high priority — and when the military knows a weapon is missing, it does trigger a concerted response to recover it.

“We have a very large inventory of several million of these weapons,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said in an interview. “We take this very seriously, and we think we do a very good job. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t losses. It doesn’t mean that there aren’t mistakes made.”

Weapons accountabi­lity is part of military routine. Armorers are supposed to check weapons when they open each day. Sight counts, a visual total of weapons on hand, are drilled into troops whether they are in the field, on patrol or in the arms room. But as long as there have been armories, people have been stealing from them.

In the absence of a regular reporting requiremen­t, the Pentagon is responsibl­e for informing Congress of any “significan­t” incidents of missing weapons. That hasn’t happened since at least 2017.

Stolen military guns have been sold to street gang members, recovered on felons and used in violent crimes.

The AP identified eight instances in which five stolen military firearms were used in a civilian shooting or other violent crime, and others in which felons were caught possessing weapons. Federal restrictio­ns on sharing firearms informatio­n publicly mean the case total is certainly an undercount.

The military requires itself to inform civilian law enforcemen­t agencies when a gun is unaccounte­d for, and the services help in investigat­ions. The Pentagon does not track guns used in crimes.

The closest the AP could find to an independen­t tally was done by the FBI’s Criminal Justice Informatio­n Services. It said 22 guns issued by the U.S. military were used in felony crimes during the 2010s. That total could include surplus weapons the military sells to the public or lends to civilian law enforcemen­t agencies.

Those FBI records also appear to be an undercount. They say that no military-issue gun was used in a felony in 2018, but the AP found that at least one was.

In June 2018, police in Albany, N.Y., were searching for a suspect in an April shooting that involved the Beretta M9 stolen from the Army. By the time authoritie­s found him two months later, bullet-casing analysis would link the gun to two other shootings, plus a fourth in 2017.

The Army still doesn’t know who stole the gun, or when.

 ?? (AP/U.S. Marine Corps/Lance Cpl. Ryan Hageali) ?? A recruit is issued a rifle at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot at Parris Island, S.C., in this June 2019 photo. The armory is in charge of more than 10,000 rifles on Parris Island.
(AP/U.S. Marine Corps/Lance Cpl. Ryan Hageali) A recruit is issued a rifle at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot at Parris Island, S.C., in this June 2019 photo. The armory is in charge of more than 10,000 rifles on Parris Island.

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