Author Topic: Since 2013, more SEALs have died in training than combat, records show  (Read 559 times)

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rangerrebew

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Since 2013, more SEALs have died in training than combat, records show
 
http://www.stripes.com/news/navy/since-2013-more-seals-have-died-in-training-than-combat-records-show-1.409556
   
Megan Anuci/U.S. Navy
By Ray Locker
USA Today
Published: May 14, 2016

     

Related

    The body of Navy Seal Charles Humphrey Keating IV, who was killed in action in Iraq on May 3, 2016, is taken in to the church in Coronado, Calif., for the service on Friday, May 13, 2016.
John Gibbins/The San Diego Union-Tribune via AP   
    Crowds line streets to honor US Navy SEAL killed in Iraq

    The crowd stood in somber silence and some wiped away tears as the casket of Charles Keating IV was carried out of a Catholic church and driven through seven blocks lined with mourners.
    From left, Seaman Daniel DelBianco, Seaman James "Derek" Lovelace and Petty Officer 2nd Class Caplen Weare.
Courtesy of DelBianco family, U.S. Navy and the Weare family   
    3 deaths linked to last 4 Navy SEAL training classes

    A sailor has died in three out of the last four Navy SEAL training classes, with one drowning days ago during a pool exercise and another committing suicide in April after failing to complete one of the U.S. military’s most demanding training programs.

WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) — More Navy SEALs have died in training over the last three years than in combat or from combat-related wounds, according to records kept by the Navy SEAL Foundation, a nonprofit group based in Virginia Beach, Va.

Since 2013 through last week, nine SEALs have died in training, including Seaman James Derek Lovelace, a 21-year-old trainee who died May 6.

Four SEALs died in training in the first four months of 2015, records show, while another three died in early 2013. That’s compared to four SEAL deaths from combat or service-connected wounds during the same period, the foundation records show.

In the latest instance, a Navy spokesman said on Tuesday that Lovelace was pulled out of a pool at a SEAL facility in Coronado, Calif., and transported to a civilian hospital after showing signs of trouble swimming.

Lovelace and his cohort from Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL training Class 319 were doing a pool familiarization exercise in their first week of training in Coronado, Calif., Naval Special Warfare Center spokesman Lt. Trevor Davids said, treading water in camouflage uniforms and dive masks.

But NBC News and the Virginian-Pilot reported on Friday that Lovelace, of Crestview, Fla., may have been held underwater during a training exercise by an instructor.

The report cites source, including "two family members of SEAL students who were present during the incident and a former SEAL who's coaching a student through the course" who said "Lovelace had been held underwater before passing out." None of the source was an eyewitness to Lovelace's death.

The NBC/Virginian-Pilot report said a Navy spokesman did not immediately respond to questions and that the early "findings of an autopsy by the San Diego County Medical Examiner's office indicate Lovelace drowned, though the investigation of cause of death is ongoing. The Naval Criminal Investigative Service is investigating, as is the case after any training death."
« Last Edit: May 15, 2016, 09:15:32 am by rangerrebew »