The Navy Has Promised Action On Mental Health And Suicide, But Sailors Are Still Dying
The death of a sailor from a self-inflicted gunshot at a luxury resort in Honolulu this weekend was the third gun death tied to the Pacific Fleet submarine force in just over 16 months.
The sailor who killed himself while barricaded in a fourth-floor room at The Kahala Hotel & Resort during a standoff with police this weekend died a month after another member of the Pacific Fleet’s submarine force died of a gunshot wound while on duty at Pearl Harbor.
The deaths underscored the challenges facing the Navy as it tries to implement promised reforms in addressing mental health issues and other problems following a 2019 murder-suicide by another member of the submarine force at the Honolulu shipyard.
The Honolulu Medical Examiner identified the 40-year-old sailor who died on Saturday as Russell Cruz of Kailua, according to media reports.
The Navy refused to release his name or occupation but confirmed that the sailor had been assigned to the Pearl Harbor-based Pacific Fleet submarine force.
鈥淓ach member of our team is important,鈥 said Cmdr. Cindy Fields, a spokeswoman for the Pacific Fleet鈥檚 submarine force. 鈥淭his is a tragic loss to our submarine force and the Navy family. So we do take it very seriously.鈥
Fields declined to identify the sailor or provide more details until his family and chain of command have all been fully informed.
鈥淗onolulu PD are looking into this case,鈥 said Fields. 鈥淭hey have leads for this case and are looking at the causation or what might have been the reason for the person to be in the room or to want to harm themselves.鈥
Also under investigation is the death of Petty Officer 3rd Class Manuel Julian, a 23-year-old torpedoman’s mate who was assigned to the fast-attack submarine USS Charlotte. He was found dead on March 15 of 聽“an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound” while guarding the sub at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, according to a press release at the time.聽The Naval Criminal Investigative Service is leading that investigation.
Navy officials issued a series of recommendations after Machinist鈥檚 Mate Auxiliary Fireman Gabriel Antonio Romero, a 22-year-old sailor assigned to the attack submarine USS Columbia, opened fire on civilian workers on Dec. 4, 2019, killing two and wounding another before turning a pistol on himself.
The 190-page investigation report did not determine a motive for the killings but called for a major overhaul of Naval Submarine Support Command鈥檚 Embedded Mental Health Program, or eMHP, along with a series of other changes.聽
Military-Wide Problem
It also noted that the Columbia鈥檚 chief of boat told investigators Romero鈥檚 behavior before the shooting didn鈥檛 raise red flags because 鈥渙ther Sailors worried the COB more at the time.鈥 Many sailors on the Columbia reported low morale, high stress and mental health concerns.
The investigation found many were 鈥渦nwilling to seek help for mental health issues due to fear of negative impacts on their security clearance or job鈥 and that 鈥渁 review of Romero鈥檚 care and eMHP Clinic diagnostic data indicate a potential pattern of under-diagnosis to maintain patients on submarine duty.鈥
After the release of the investigation Navy officials told Civil Beat that they expected reforms to follow.
As in the general population, suicides have been a concern for the military for years across all the service branches. According to the most recent released in October, at least 498 troops died by suicide in 2019 — marking a six-year high.
Over the summer, the Pentagon also acknowledged that it as troops coped with the combined pressure of stay home orders and continued training and deployments around the globe.
For the past few years the Pacific Fleet has conducted continuous operations across the region amid increased tensions with the Chinese Navy in the South China Sea. The high rate of operations and training has been demanding on both troops and equipment push them to their limits.
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