Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Captain in covid leak to leave Navy

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SAN DIEGO — The former captain of the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt — fired from command after sounding the alarm on an out-of-control coronaviru­s outbreak on board in 2020 — will retire from the Navy next month, the Navy Times newspaper reported Monday.

Captain Brett Crozier, a 30-year-Navy veteran, was removed from command of the Roosevelt — based in San Diego at the time — after the leak of a letter he wrote to Pacific Fleet commanders in which he implored the Navy to do more to protect the crew as dozens of sailors began testing positive for covid-19.

The ship was just a couple of months into a scheduled deployment to the Western Pacific when the outbreak began. It was sidelined in Guam but sailors were still living in close quarters on board as the virus spread unabated.

Immediatel­y after Crozier’s letter was made public, the Navy announced thousands of sailors would move off the ship. The next day, Crozier was fired from command.

Video of Crozier’s departure from the ship showed hundreds of sailors cheering their captain and chanting his name. Shortly after those videos went viral, the acting secretary of the Navy at the time, Thomas Modly, visited the ship and blasted Crozier over its public address system.

Audio of Modly’s profane 15-minute speech also leaked. The acting secretary first apologized, then resigned.

Crozier was initially reassigned to a staff position at Naval Air Forces in San Diego. Crozier later told investigat­ors he understood the risk to his career he took in writing the letter but did so to avoid a “larger catastroph­e.”

The Roosevelt remained in Guam for two months before finishing its deployment and returning to San Diego. One Roosevelt sailor, Chief Petty Officer Thomas Thacker of Fort Smith, died of the virus. He was the first of 92 service members — 17 of them sailors — to die from the virus throughout the pandemic.

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