Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Sailor acquitted of arson in San Diego Navy ship fire

Seaman recruit, 21, was accused of setting devastatin­g blaze on Bonhomme Richard, an amphibious assault carrier, in July 2020.

- By Andrew Dyer Dyer writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A 21-yearold sailor was acquitted at a military court-martial Friday morning on charges accusing him of setting the devastatin­g 2020 fire on the amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard.

Seaman Recruit Ryan Sawyer Mays was charged with aggravated arson and the willful hazarding of a vessel in July 2021, more than a year after the blaze on board the $1.2-billion ship, which was moored at Naval Base San Diego at the time. The fire caused so much damage the Navy chose to sell the vessel for scrap.

Testimony and argument in the two-week trial — located in a military courtroom just 1,000 feet from the pier where the Bonhomme Richard had been moored when it burned — wrapped up Thursday morning. Capt. Derek Butler, the military judge overseeing the trial, began deliberati­ng just before 11 a.m. Thursday and returned with his verdict at 9:22 a.m. Friday.

Mays broke down sobbing when the judge read the not-guilty verdict in court. He then entered the gallery, went to his mother and held her in a long embrace.

“I’m so grateful this is finally over — it’s been a long two years,” Mays told reporters after the verdict in a prepared statement. “I’ve lost time with friends, I’ve lost friends, I’ve lost time with family and my entire Navy career was ruined.

“I am looking forward to starting over,” he said.

Other than a single witness, the Navy’s case against Mays was circumstan­tial, as Capt. Jason Jones, the lead prosecutor, acknowledg­ed in closing arguments a day earlier. However, the defense team had other witnesses whose testimony contradict­ed the Navy’s version of events — including their own witness who said she saw a sailor with no resemblanc­e to Mays near the scene where the fire began.

Lt. Cmdr. Jordi Torres, Mays’ lead defense attorney, told reporters Friday that the verdict confirmed Mays did not set the fire. “This is, in fact, an innocent sailor, and we could not be happier for him,” Torres said.

The Navy’s prosecutor­s did not comment on the verdict. A Navy spokespers­on also declined to elaborate.

“The Navy is committed to upholding the principles of due process and a fair trial,” said Lt. Samuel Boyle, a 3rd Fleet spokespers­on.

Mays, who was 19 at the time of the fire, faced life in prison if convicted.

It was unclear Friday what’s next for Mays — he is still on active duty but tested positive for drugs last year. He was reduced in rank to seaman apprentice, or E-1, in January. The Navy has a zero-tolerance policy on drugs, and Gary Barthel, Mays’ former civilian attorney, said it’s possible he might still be separated from the Navy.

In comments to reporters Friday, Barthel said it’s time for the Navy to take responsibi­lity for the blaze. “I believe that throughout this entire mess, the Navy was attempting to clean up their mess by accusing Seaman Mays,” he said.

More than 20 Navy officers — including the ship’s captain, executive officer and the former commander of Naval Base San Diego — were administra­tively punished in the wake of the blaze. The former commander of the San Diego-based Naval Surface Forces, retired Vice Adm. Richard Brown, was censured by the secretary of the Navy in July.

The fire erupted on the 844-foot warship the morning of July 12, 2020, while “the Navy slept,” Jones, the prosecutor, said during closing arguments Thursday. It took two hours before firefighte­rs were able to get water on the flames, and by the time they did it was too late to save the ship, a Navy investigat­ion found.

The blaze was declared extinguish­ed after burning for more than four days. Soon after, the ship was declared a total loss. It was decommissi­oned and scrapped last year.

The fire began in the ship’s lower vehicle storage area, or “lower V,” just after 8 a.m., investigat­ors said. Amphibious assault ships are designed as mini-aircraft carriers, with a flight deck for helicopter and MV-22B Osprey operations. When deployed, the Bonhomme Richard would also carry Marines, who would launch and recover amphibious vehicles from the well deck of the ship.

The Bonhomme Richard

was nearing the end of a twoyear, $250-million maintenanc­e period in which it was retrofitte­d to be able to deploy with Marine F-35B Lightning II fighters.

Mays fell under suspicion soon after the blaze when a sailor told Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service investigat­ors he saw somebody matching Mays’ descriptio­n walk down into the lower V about 20 minutes before first seeing smoke. The sailor, a deck seaman named Kenji Velasco, was on watch in the upper vehicle storage area between the ramp leading up to the ship’s hangar bay and the one leading into the lower V, according to testimony.

Mays graduated Navy boot camp in July 2019, according to his Navy bio. He graduated from a Navy SEAL prerequisi­te school in Illinois before reporting to the Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL school in Coronado that September.

However, according to Navy prosecutor­s, Mays quit BUD/S on his fifth day of training. Sailors who fail to complete BUD/S are sent to the fleet as “undesignat­ed” sailors, meaning they do not receive specialize­d job training or secondary schools before reporting to their duty stations.

Mays reported to the Bonhomme Richard in March 2020, his Navy bio says. He was assigned to the ship’s Deck Department as a deck seaman — a job that mostly involves cleaning and painting the ship.

Mays did not like his new life as a fleet Navy sailor, according

to testimony. His unhappines­s with his new role in the Navy is what gave Mays motive to start the fire, Jones said Thursday.

“Deck Department on a big-deck amphib is about as far from the SEALs as you can be,” Jones said during his closing argument. Jones said Mays felt the Navy’s blue-water mission was “beneath him.”

In the days before the fire, Bonhomme Richard sailors were told they’d have to move back on board the ship from their temporary living quarters on a nearby barge, according to testimony. Upon hearing this, Mays texted his division officer that the ship was “hazardous as [expletive]” because a spark from a ship contractor had recently struck Mays while in his rack in the Deck berthing, the former division officer testified.

Jones argued that Mays set the fire to “prove a point.”

Mays’ defense team, led by Torres, highlighte­d what it said were examples of “confirmati­on bias” among investigat­ors. From U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives investigat­ors to NCIS special agents, Mays’ lawyers argued, officials made a premature arson determinat­ion and became fixated on Mays without considerin­g alternativ­es.

Defense fire investigat­ors testified that fire-damaged lithium-ion batteries found in the blaze’s area of origin could not be eliminated as a potential cause of the fire, nor could a forklift have shorted and sent sparks into nearby flammable material.

Prosecutor­s’ burden went beyond proving the fire was intentiona­lly set — they also had to prove Mays set it. Velasco, who is now a petty officer 2nd class, was the only prosecutio­n witness to testify to seeing Mays near where the fire began.

Velasco testified that on the day of the fire, he saw a person he believed to be Mays walk by him wearing a hat, mask and blue coveralls who went down the lower V ramp carrying a metal bucket with both hands.

Defense attorneys pointed out that Velasco initially told NCIS he did not recognize the person he saw but over a series of interviews became more certain it was Mays.

Another witness testified she saw a different sailor running from the lower V just before the fire. The sailor she described was darkskinne­d, taller and had a larger build than Mays, who is white.

Special Agent Maya Kamat, the lead NCIS investigat­or, said in court that she looked into the second suspect, who at one point became the focus of the criminal investigat­ion. Mays — who was taken into custody Aug. 20, 2020 — was released from the brig less than two months later as the investigat­ion shifted focus.

The second suspect had Google searches for fire heat scales on his phone and a “burner phone” app, Torres said during his closing argument. Data was also missing from the device around the time of the fire, Torres said.

NCIS stopped investigat­ing the sailor when he was discharged from the Navy in the spring of this year, Kamat said — in part because once he left the service, he was no longer subject to military law and military law enforcemen­t.

Jones acknowledg­ed in his closing arguments that much of the evidence against Mays was circumstan­tial but said that is normal in arson cases, in which most direct evidence is destroyed by fire.

 ?? Andrew Dyer San Diego Union-Tribune ?? AFTER his not-guilty verdict, Seaman Recruit Ryan Mays said he is “looking forward to starting over.”
Andrew Dyer San Diego Union-Tribune AFTER his not-guilty verdict, Seaman Recruit Ryan Mays said he is “looking forward to starting over.”

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