Times-Herald

U.S. Army has hidden, downplayed loss of firearms for years.

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The U.S. Army has hidden or downplayed the extent to which its firearms disappear, significan­tly understati­ng losses and thefts even as some weapons are used in street crimes.

The Army's pattern of secrecy and suppressio­n dates back nearly a decade, when The Associated Press began investigat­ing weapons accountabi­lity within the military. Officials fought the release of informatio­n for years, then offered misleading answers that contradict internal records.

Military guns aren't just disappeari­ng. Stolen guns have been used in shootings, brandished to rob and threaten people and recovered in the hands of felons. Thieves sold assault rifles to a street gang.

Army officials cited informatio­n that suggests only a couple of hundred firearms vanished during the 2010s. Internal Army memos that AP obtained show losses many times higher.

Efforts to suppress informatio­n date to 2012, when AP filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request seeking records from a registry where all four armed services are supposed to report firearms loss or theft.

The former Army insider who oversaw this registry described how he pulled an accounting of the Army's lost or stolen weapons, but learned later that his superiors blocked its release.

As AP continued to press for informatio­n, including through legal challenges, the Army produced a list of missing weapons that was so clearly incomplete officials later disavowed it. They then produced a second set of records that also did not give a full count.

Secrecy surroundin­g a sensitive topic extends beyond the Army. The Air Force wouldn't provide data on missing weapons, saying answers would have to await a federal records request AP filed 1.5 years ago.

The broader Department of Defense also has not released reports of weapons losses that it receives from the armed services. It would only provide approximat­e totals for two years of AP's 2010 through 2019 study period.

The Pentagon stopped regularly sharing informatio­n about missing weapons with Congress years ago, apparently in the 1990s. Defense Department officials said they would still notify lawmakers if a theft or loss meets the definition of being "significan­t," but no such notificati­on has been made since at least 2017.

On Tuesday, when AP first published its investigat­ion, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., demanded during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing that the Pentagon resurrect regular reporting.

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