Los Angeles Times

General discipline­d over training deaths

Marine officer is the highest-ranking leader to bear responsibi­lity for vehicle’s sinking.

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

SAN DIEGO — The highest-ranking Marine officer bearing some responsibi­lity for the fatal 2020 sinking of an amphibious vehicle off the coast of San Diego is being formally discipline­d by the Marine Corps, the service said Wednesday.

Maj. Gen. Robert Castellvi, who was the commanding general of the Camp Pendleton-based 1st Marine Division at the time of the accident, will not return to his job as the Marine Corps inspector general. He also received what the Marines described as “adverse administra­tive action” — he was “personally and formally” counseled by the commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. David Berger.

Castellvi failed to “properly train the Marines and sailors for whom he was entrusted” and inadequate­ly evaluated the platoon before it was attached to the 15th Marine Expedition­ary Unit, the Marines said.

That platoon — Battalion Landing Team 1/4 — was training for a deployment with the 15th MEU near San Clemente Island off San Diego last summer when an assault amphibious vehicle with 16 troops inside began taking on water.

According to a Marine Corps investigat­ion, the troops on board had not been properly trained to escape the vehicle while in the water and the vehicle commander waited too long — 45 minutes — to order an evacuation. When another AAV made its way to the foundering vehicle, it struck the first AAV on the side, tilting it into an oncoming wave, which sent water in through an open escape hatch.

The vehicle quickly sank, killing eight Marines and one sailor. They ranged in age from 18 to 23.

The Marine Corps probe also found the platoon’s decades-old vehicles were in poor condition. The day of the accident, one could not leave the ship and others could not leave San Clemente Island at the conclusion of the training mission, before the sinking, due to mechanical failures.

Lt. Col. Michael Regner, the commanding officer of Battalion Landing Team 1/4, was removed from command in October. Col. Christophe­r Bronzi, the commanding officer of the 15th MEU, was fired in March upon the completion of the Marine Corps investigat­ion. Although the investigat­ion found Castellvi bore some responsibi­lity for the accident, the Corps did not immediatel­y punish him.

Under pressure from the families of those killed, the Marines opened another investigat­ion into the formation of the MEU. Shortly after it began, Castellvi was suspended as inspector general pending the new investigat­ion’s outcome.

In April, the service resumed limited waterborne operations of AAVs, but ship-to-shore operations remain on hold, the Marines said Wednesday.

 ?? Lance Cpl. Brendan Mullin U.S. Marine Corps ?? MARINES and sailors load a C-17 plane with caskets after a July 2020 training accident that killed nine.
Lance Cpl. Brendan Mullin U.S. Marine Corps MARINES and sailors load a C-17 plane with caskets after a July 2020 training accident that killed nine.

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