The Sun (San Bernardino)

INSIDE: Family of Marine reflects on the investigat­ion into the deadly AAV sinking.

- By Erika I. Ritchie eritchie@scng.com

Evelyn Baltierra clasped her hands and smiled nervously as she stood in her living room pointing out photos and memorabili­a of her only son, Pfc. Bryan Baltierra, one of nine men who died when their amphibious assault vehicle sank to the ocean floor off San Clemente Island during a Marine Corps pre-deployment training raid this summer.

The eight-foot-long wall of memories was created with photos of Bryan’s life: images of a brightly smiling Boy Scout, an athletic young track star and stoic photos a Marine while training.

Carlos Baltierra, Bryan’s father, pointed out the boots the 18-year-old Corona boy was wearing when his body was recovered from nearly 400 feet down on the ocean floor. That day, July 30, was the first anniversar­y of the day Bryan joined the Marine Corps.

Marine Corps officials crisscross­ed the nation this week to personally deliver the results of an eight-month investigat­ioninto how B al tier ra and the other men died while training.

Finding a series of failures up and down the chain of command and in the training and equipment, the investigat­ion said the deaths were preventabl­e.

At 11 a.m. sharp on Monday, March 22, the Baltierras — and their three daughters, Natalie, 24, Emily, 22, and Sara, 17 — heard that familiar firm knock on the door. The sound was the same as the one that shattered their lives nearly eight months ago, when at first Bryan was reported among the missing hours before he was confirmed dead.

Four sharply dressed Marine Corps officers entered. Two — Chaplain Joe Costephens and Casualty Assistance Officer Chris Aument — have been with the family throughout the last many months. Col. Mark Van Skike was there to deliver the findings of the investigat­ion, which were publicly released

Thursday after all the families had been briefed. Another Marine officer from the Judge Advocate’s Office was on hand to answer questions.

Each look over at Bryan’s memorial wall as they entered the home and moved to the family’s kitchen table after initial greetings. Van Skike, saying a “conscious effort” had been made to keep as much of the investigat­ion un-redacted for the families as possible, launched into the investigat­ion’s details.

The report focused on the actions of Marine Corps commanders, what procedures were followed and which weren’ t, and the maintenanc­e of the vehicles.

The details were not easy to hear, frequently bring tears from the Baltierra family members. Van Skike talked about some of the events that day on the island that likely later played a role in the accident, including that the AAV was among a few vehicles of the group of 13 that had mechanical failures.

The investigat­ion said it appeared to be out of oil in the transmissi­on.

“The driver brought that to the attention of the rear crewman and he started looking at the engine to see if he could find the source of the leak,” Van Skike said.

Carlos Baltierra told Van Skike that just two hours before the vehicle sank, his son texted him telling him that they would be on the island a while longer because smoke was coming from the engine.

“He was sending me pictures, he was saying, ‘Hey Dad, the trac is smoking, we’re stopped here.’ I was making fun of him and joking saying, ‘OK, I’ll call AAA. We’ll get you some help.’

“Two hours later, he goes, ‘Dad, I think we got it fixed and we’re going to take a dip in the ocean.’ It was the last time I heard from him.”

Most important to Carlos Baltierra was whether the Marine Corps took responsibi­lity for the tragedy.

“As an organizati­on, we failed, we catastroph­ically failed,” Van Skike said.

Baltierra afterward said the informatio­n felt somewhat incomplete, and left him with even more questions.

“I’m glad they are taking accountabi­lity for their actions during the 45 minutes,” he said, referring to the actual time the men had to get off the slowly sinking AAV. “But there is so much more that occurred.”

Van Skike’s talk with the Baltierras ended with a bit of personal informatio­n about Bryan.

“This is where it gets tough,” Van Skike said, taking a long pause. “He was a brother. He had just joined a new platoon and had a great reputation. He was an early riser and an avid runner. He said, he had to do it to keep up with his sister.”

 ?? JEFF GRITCHEN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Carlos and Evelyn Baltierra, and family friend Eva Kelly, left, listen as Col. Mark Van Skike briefs them on what happened when their son, Bryan Juan-Carlos Baltierra, and eight other service members died after their amphibious assault vehicle sank off San Clemente Island in July 2020, in Corona on Monday.
JEFF GRITCHEN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Carlos and Evelyn Baltierra, and family friend Eva Kelly, left, listen as Col. Mark Van Skike briefs them on what happened when their son, Bryan Juan-Carlos Baltierra, and eight other service members died after their amphibious assault vehicle sank off San Clemente Island in July 2020, in Corona on Monday.

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