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Due to the nature of their mission, this unit at Fort Benning had an FBI LNO in the 80s when I was HHC CDR 1-507th.
http://www.cid.army.mil/fort_benning_bn.html Just sayin...;) Richard |
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The two (interceptor equiped) Fords that Treasury provided the office were smokin' hot. :D v/r phil |
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The press is reporting the agent was at the right place at the wrong time and the agent made a decision to intervene. Also last night the local press interviewed the brother of the deceased. Reportedly the deceased had history of substance abuse and had a prior conviction of assault on LEO. Finally the press reported that the deceased is prior Army Vietnam Vet with Purple Heart and was diagnosed with PTSD. As always take press reports for what they are worth. |
I have had Secret Service and FBI agents working alongside during certain missions at the base, it is not anything unusual.
The nut jobs also know they are there and why, as well. Draw whatever conclusions you like. PTSD is starting to sound like a convenient excuse for bad behavior by some individuals......... |
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If that is how the agent ended up involved, I would be surprised if the agent knew the call involved a drunk Vietnam vet leaving the campground (and therefore he couldn't be expected to avoid it), not that it makes any difference to me. |
http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/15/flo...rrests/?hpt=T2
Armed pair held at Central Command base June 15, 2010 2:12 a.m. EDT MacDill Air Force Base, Florida (CNN) -- All gates at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida will be open Tuesday after being temporarily closed after a heavily armed man and woman were taken into custody when they tried to enter the facility without authorization, an Air Force spokeswoman said. They were stopped at a gate at the base that houses the headquarters for U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan early Monday evening after they could not show proper identification, Senior Airman Katherine Holt said. A search of the vehicle after they were detained found military-style uniforms and gear and several "rifle-type" weapons, Holt said. The two were questioned Monday evening, another Air Force spokeswoman, Elizabeth Gosselin said. Authorities cordoned off their sport utility vehicle and searched it using a robot, but no explosives were found, Holt said. Video showed base personnel removing weapons, ammunition and military-style clothing from the vehicle, which was later towed away. The Tampa, Florida, installation houses the headquarters of U.S. Central Command, which runs the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as the U.S. Special Operations Command. |
Man who tried entering MacDill Air Force Base was AWOL
June 15, 2010
Man who tried entering MacDill Air Force Base was AWOL, officials say The Associated Press TAMPA — An AWOL serviceman arrested as he tried to enter MacDill Air Force Base with weapons and ammunition in his vehicle has been charged with desertion and will be turned over to the Army, base officials reported this evening. Spc. Christopher Paul Kilburn had been stationed with Alpha Company, 1-16th 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kan., a media release from the base said. It did not specify when he left. Kilburn will be turned over to Army officials, and additional charges will be pending as the investigation continues. The U.S. Attorney’s Office will decide how to charge Kilburn’s companion, Palm Beach resident Micah Noel Goodier. The couple was arrested Monday evening, when they tried to gain access to the base. The base’s public affairs office did not know if either person had an attorney. Air Force Col. Dave Cohen said during a news conference earlier today that it doesn’t appear to have been a terrorism attempt. Investigators were still trying to get to the bottom of the couple’s motivation and intent, Cohen said. “We’ve been talking to them since last night trying to get information, and we’re still trying to put that puzzle together,” he said. The couple’s Honda CRV contained three handguns, three rifles and some ammunition, Cohen said. He described them as “military style” but commercially available. He said they tried to drive onto the base at about 5 p.m. at a remote gate and flashed phony military identification. A security officer became suspicious, and the couple cooperated when they were asked by officers to get out of the car. When the weapons were found, a bomb disposal unit was called to examine the car, Cohen said. No explosives were found. “At no point was the security of MacDill Air Force Base breached,” he said. “The system worked exactly as it was supposed to.” MacDill, situated on a peninsula south of downtown Tampa, is the home of U.S. Central Command, which oversees operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. It also houses the U.S. Special Operations Command that coordinates the activities of elite units from the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines. Last month, an FBI agent who was at the base on unrelated business fatally shot a Vietnam veteran after an altercation. The veteran had been staying at the family campground on the base. Officials said he came at the agent with a knife before he was killed. |
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2010/0...osives_061610/
Man seized at Army post had land mine, laser scope By Kate Brumback - The Associated Press Posted : Wednesday Jun 16, 2010 14:48:26 EDT FORT GORDON, Ga. — A former national guardsman pretending to be an active-duty soldier convinced an officer to give him a sophisticated laser sight for military rifles before he was caught hours later on the base with a land mine, several grenades and night vision devices, prosecutors said Wednesday. Federal prosecutors said in a criminal complaint that Anthony Todd Saxon, 34, falsely pretended to be an Army master sergeant on Tuesday and sought to steal the infrared laser targeting sight. He was expected to appear in federal court later Wednesday. Saxon was wearing a full combat uniform, including rank and insignia, when he was stopped at Fort Gordon by military police and questioned about his activities, according to the complaint. After Saxon gave them consent to search his vehicle, authorities said they found several grenades and the land mine, among other equipment. According to the complaint, Saxon told investigators he was able to obtain the laser sight by telling a captain in the base’s military police office that he was a master sergeant in the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division and that he needed it to train a soldier. He told investigators he was able to obtain the device after signing a receipt, according to the court documents. He also said he was a member of the Army National Guard between 1993 and 1995, but was medically discharged for heart problems. Florida National Guard spokeswoman Crystal McNairy said that Saxon joined the Guard in 1993 and left with an honorable discharge in 1994. She said his rank was private 1st class, but she would not provide any other details about his service. Fort Gordon spokesman Buz Yarnell said Saxon was stopped on the Army post because his car matched the description of a vehicle suspected in an earlier theft of military equipment from the post in April. Yarnell would not say what had been stolen. Yarnell said the grenades, called “flash bangs,” use blinding light and loud noise to stun people but don’t explode into lethal shrapnel. “He couldn’t have done any serious damage,” said Yarnell, who would not say whether the explosives were detonated. He said there’s no suspected connection between Saxon and an AWOL serviceman arrested Monday in Florida after he tried to enter MacDill Air Force Base with weapons and ammunition in his vehicle. But Yarnell said military authorities still don’t know what Saxon was doing on Fort Gordon.... |
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And so it goes... Richard's $.02 :munchin |
Military investigates shooting at Ga. Army post
By SHANNON McCAFFREY (AP) – 3 hours ago FOREST PARK, Ga. — An Army reservist was shot to death and another was custody Thursday at a post south of Atlanta that is a gathering place for area reserve units. Army spokesman Col. Dan Baggio said the victim died at the U.S. Army Reserve Center located on Fort Gillem. He could not offer specifics about the shooting that happened between 4:30 and 5 p.m. Authorities said they were withholding the names of the soldiers until they can notify family members, but did say both were men. Authorities have not determined a motive and it's unclear what the relationship was between the two men. Nobody else was injured. Peter Chadwick, a spokesman for Fort Gillem and Fort McPherson, said it's unclear whether anybody else was inside a building when the shooting happened or whether any civilians were involved. Fort Gillem, established in 1943, is one of three Georgia military bases slated to shut down under a sweeping round of base closures decided in 2005. Along with nearby Fort McPherson and Naval Air Station-Atlanta, the 1,427-acre Army post is scheduled to close next year. The post includes the headquarters for the U.S. Army Recruiting Brigade and 1st U.S. Army, which does reserve and National Guard training east of the Mississippi. It also includes the U.S. Army and Air Force Exchange Distribution Region and the only Criminal Investigation Division laboratory in the world. Chadwick said the reserve center is located on Fort Gillem, but does not share the same command. Thursday's shooting followed a bizarre arrest at Fort Gordon Tuesday. A former national guardsman was caught on the east Georgia base with a land mine, several grenades and night vision devices, authorities said. Anthony Todd Saxon, 34, was charged with impersonating an Army master sergeant and stealing the infrared laser targeting sight. It remains unclear what Saxon planned to do with the devices. Associated Press Writer Dionne Walker in Atlanta contributed to this report. |
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...yxG5QD9GFOINO0
NJ naval base locked down; spokesman won't say why (AP) – 16 minutes ago LAKEHURST, N.J. — Officials have lifted a lockdown at a navy base in Lakehurst, N.J. Senior Airman David Carbajal (CAR'-bah-hall), a spokesman, says there were several "incidents" Monday that he is not yet able to provide more information about. Carbajal says no shots were fired and the base is now secure. The lockdown lasted about two hours and kept traffic from getting into or out of the base. The base is perhaps best know as the spot where the airship Hindenberg exploded in 1937. Now known as the Naval Air Engineering Center, one of its main missions relates to the equipment used to launch aircraft from carriers at sea. |
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