Lawmakers are investigating the string of soldier deaths at Fort Hood
28 soldiers have died in Fort Hood, Texas this year and Congress believes there may be a leadership problem
Congress is applying pressure on the Army to provide information in regard to the alarming number of soldier deaths. On Tuesday, two house sub-panels joined forces and are requesting additional information in regards to the 28 deaths at Fort Hood, Texas.
Pvt. Corlton Chee, 25, is the 28th recent death at Fort Hood. The young soldier collapsed after participating in physical fitness training and died on Sept. 2. As reported by theGrio, his passing comes on the heels of the death of Vanessa Guillen, the soldier whose bodily remains were found near Fort Hood after her disappearance.
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Fort Hood has a reputation as one of the military’s most disturbed instillations. The House Armed Services Subcommittee on Military Personnel and the House Oversight and Reform Subcommittee on National Security are requesting information surrounding the deaths and are giving the Army until October 2nd to provide answers.
According to The Hill, Heads of the subgroups, Reps. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) and Stephen Lynch (D-Mass), sent a letter to Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy to announce the groups, “are jointly investigating whether an alarming pattern of recent tragedies at Fort Hood, Texas, may be symptomatic of underlying leadership, discipline, and morale deficiencies throughout the chain-of-command.”
The letter goes on to say, “Where appropriate, we intend to seek justice on behalf of those in uniform, and their families, who may have been failed by a military system and culture that was ultimately responsible for their care and protection.”
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There have been about 129 felonies annually between 2014-2019 at Fort Hood that range between assault, homicide, kidnapping, sexual assault, and robbery. Back in July, McCarthy said the service will look into these tragedies independently, but per The Hill, the reps say that will not suffice.
“Where appropriate, we intend to seek justice on behalf of those in uniform, and their families, who may have been failed by a military system and culture that was ultimately responsible for their care and protection.”
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