The Oklahoman

Policy overhaul helps Fort Hood find soldier

- Heather Osbourne

Months after overhaulin­g its missing persons policy following the slaying of Army Spc. Vanessa Guillen last year, Fort Hood leaders last weekend successful­ly used the new rules to find another missing soldier by asking the public for help.

Fort Hood on Saturday released a statement asking Texans to assist in finding Pfc. Jennifer Sewell, who had been last seen leaving her post barracks Thursday evening. The soldier’s superiors said she did not report for work Thursday, and her family and chain of command could not get in touch with her.

Sewell did not have her own vehicle, but investigat­ors believed she had left the post willingly, according to the statement.

On Sunday, the Central Texas post released another statement saying she was found safe with extended family.

“We are in regular contact with her family and will provide any assistance she and her family may need to return to Fort Hood,” said Lt. Col. Octavia Davis, commander of Regimental Support Squadron, 3rd Cavalry Regiment.

Fort Hood was the topic of national scrutiny last year over its policies for missing soldiers and more after Guillen’s family reported the 20-year-old soldier missing in late April 2020.

The Guillen family held protests outside of Fort Hood for months, demanding that Army officials better communicat­e with them about the search for the soldier and use more resources to find her. Their protests ended after Guillen’s remains were found by constructi­on workers near a river in late June.

Authoritie­s now believe fellow Army Spc. Aaron Robinson beat 20-year-old Guilen to death with a hammer in an armory room on post the morning of April 22, 2020. Robinson fatally shot himself July 1, 2020, as authoritie­s sought to question him after finding Guillen’s remains the day before.

Investigat­ors were called in last year to take a close look at how Fort Hood leaders run the installati­on. Investigat­ors found many areas where Fort Hood failed to protect soldiers, which included leaders creating a toxic environmen­t where sexual misconduct and other violence happened frequently on post.

One of the many changes the independen­t investigat­ors suggested in December was updating its policies on soldiers who are reported missing.

Christophe­r Swecker – a lawyer and 24-year FBI veteran who last year led the Fort Hood Independen­t Review Committee that investigat­ed the post in the wake of the Guillen case – said earlier this year that during the investigat­ion he learned that the majority of Fort Hood’s Criminal Investigat­ion Command was made up of apprentice agents with less than three years of experience who operated without much, if any, expert oversight.

As a result, the slew of criminal investigat­ions at Fort Hood often were incomplete, along with paperwork to back up that the agents had properly handled the cases. Swecker said it appeared that agents took a checklist approach to investigat­ions, frequently failing to use forensics to solve crimes and allowing the expiration of phone tracking programs used in investigat­ing crimes or searching for missing soldiers.

 ?? BRONTË WITTPENN/AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Fort Hood in Texas was the topic of national scrutiny last year over its policies for missing soldiers.
BRONTË WITTPENN/AMERICAN-STATESMAN Fort Hood in Texas was the topic of national scrutiny last year over its policies for missing soldiers.

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