The Sentinel-Record

Army’s criminal probes get reworked

- LOLITA C. BALDOR

WASHINGTON — The Army is putting a civilian in charge of its criminal investigat­ions, adding staff and freeing up more agents to work on cases, in a plan to address widespread failures that surfaced last year after a string of murders and other crimes at Fort Hood, Texas.

Army officials announced the plan Thursday but provided few details on how much the reorganiza­tion will cost or how long it will take, other than to say some changes will unfold over months. The changes are aimed at addressing complaints that Army investigat­ors are overwhelme­d and inexperien­ced.

The plan reflects recommenda­tions made by an independen­t review panel in the wake of the violence at Fort Hood, including the death of Vanessa Guillen, whose remains were found about two months after she was killed.

A key change will separate the Army Criminal Investigat­ion Command, or CID, from the Office of the Provost Marshall General, and instead of being run by a general officer it will be overseen by a yet-to-be-named civilian director. The intention is to improve the capabiliti­es of the command and address the findings of the Fort Hood commission.

“We are very confident these organizati­onal changes address the committee’s CID-related recommenda­tions and lead us into the future,” acting Army Secretary John Whitley said in a statement.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, the CID commander, Maj. Gen. Donna Martin, said three of the larger Army bases — Fort Hood, Fort Bragg in North Carolina and Fort Carson in Colorado — will be the first to see some of the staffing improvemen­ts and changes. Some of those are aimed at freeing agents from other duties so they can concentrat­e on criminal cases.

She said this includes adding more support personnel, putting a new officer in charge of logistics and administra­tive duties, and having military police do protective and escort details that CID agents currently do. She declined to provide any estimated costs, but said funding will be provided over the next five years.

The decision comes amid heightened attention within the Pentagon on ways to address sexual assaults and other discipline problems in the military. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s first directive after he took office in January ordered senior leaders to look into their sexual assault prevention programs, and he later created a panel to study the matter.

The Fort Hood independen­t review panel, however, was created last year by former Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy.

More than two dozen Fort Hood soldiers died in 2020, including in multiple homicides and suicides. Guillen’s death and other cases prompted the independen­t review, which found that military leaders were not adequately dealing with high rates of sexual assault, harassment, drug use and other problems at the base. The review panel, which released its findings in December, also concluded that the Army CID was understaff­ed, badly organized and had too few experience­d investigat­ors.

Members of the panel told Congress members in March that the CID investigat­ors lacked the acumen to identify key leads and “connect the dots.”

Christophe­r Swecker, chairman of the review panel, said the agents were “victims of the system,” which he said failed to train them and often had them doing administra­tive tasks. And he said the base leadership was focused on military readiness, and “completely and utterly neglected” the sexual assault prevention program. As a result, he said, lower-level unit commanders didn’t encourage service members to report assaults, and in many cases were shaming victims or were actually the perpetrato­rs themselves.

Since then, Army leaders have taken disciplina­ry action against 21 officers and noncommiss­ioned officers at Fort Hood in connection with Guillen’s disappeara­nce and death. Among those were senior base leaders as well as a CID battalion officer.

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