Navy Sailor at Captain's Mast with torn Dress Whites
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- Cleaned audio of Navy Sailor going to Captain's Mast with torn Dress Whites he wore as a cape.
01:30 - Bullshit identified.
03:16 - Sailor gases crew
15:42 - SUPER Attention
19:55 - "Beat your old bald ass..."
31:15 - Punishment
Original Video Credit: • Mast vid
I went to XO mass once for missing ships movement. My chief had put the wrong Date on my leave slip. I was scared to death. My HT1, Chief and Lieutenant all standing there with me. They read the charges, and before I could say anything, My Chief asked if he could speak. He explained how it was his error that caused all of us to be there. All three leaders stated that I was a good Sailor and this should be dropped. They dropped it, I gave the sharped salute I could while shaking. Did an about face when released, and booked it. I never forgot what they did for me, while they could have let me fry. To this day, I would do anything for any of those men.
@richardhoffman3827... I was USCG PS2 reservist (just made the list for 1st - which I didn't get) and because of my ultra flexible civy job I drilled with the active duty community during the week in an Warrant/Commissioned only billet (Investigator). In my pov under orders (that PERSRU mistyped) I was hit by a drunk driver and verbally taken off ALL duty. This had apparently never happened before, so as is typical, it was ignored and I'm "adrift". After being ignored and TRYING to follow the chain (I'm from a large military family so proper deportment etc was important) for 16 months, I didn't jump but flew over the chain and requested Admirals Mast. My AD people (who I was actually forbidden to even talk to) including Captain "X" had my back as well as, unbeknownst to me, a "Flag" at HQ. I had my Honorable in 10 days and five others recvd. "Non Punitive letters"... one of which actually threatened me with UCMJ. We both had good people looking out for us.
My dad was a chief who looked out for the non com men. He served in the battle of midway aboard the carrier Yorktown.
Leaders will do the right thing regardless of the consequences and leaders your father’s supervisors were. 🤙🏽
Awesome story.
Those are good leaders.
I served in the navy for 20 years and attended an open captains mast before,but i never seen anything as disrespectful as this guy,hats off to the CO for keeping his cool
I bet this was one of those masts where he was already kicked out and just waiting processing out and he went again lol
I'm retired Army, I've written up a troop for disrespect but it WAS NO WHERE NEAR CLOSE to this soon to be ex sailor.
Do they still have a brig on ship? Still do bread and water?
Hats off to you sir for your service. twenty years is is a testament of discipline especially in the Navy. Mental toughness must be a primary attribute most individuals don't have.
This poor soldier appears to be struggling in his situation. I feel for this guy who is in over his head and lacks the ability to cope. The largest Navy ship is just a small dot in the ocean.
Everyone aboard depends on each other and that includes this sailor. I hope he gets the help he needs to be a contributing member. Lets root for this man, and lets root for all of our service members
no kidding i never got mast but if i so much as left my room looking like that im sure some one would have said go fix that S&*^&*T
and the ones that did if they showed up looking like that im sure hed have sent them back until they fixed up their uniform
Being a Retired Navy Chief PO I have never seen a Captain's mast like this. This Skipper and his Chiefs are extremely professional and patient. You cannot have disruptive sailors like this on a warship.
Really. I was on a tender and we NEVER had open captins mast. Every last one was closed. Even when E-7’s was involved. ~former MA
They’re “professional” because it’s being filmed with cameras… They would be beating the piss out of this guy and screaming calling him every bad name you can imagine in reality.. The navy doesn’t F around
I heard he's playing standup bass in a Rockabilly band, nowadays.
cheifs can suck it, hate em all
I figure this is how they do it on a sub? I've been to mast on a carrier as a witness. We were in a room with the Captain, my Chief and a few other PO's. That was it. It lasted less than five minutes. Probably because the CO had to get through several masts at a time. Can't blame him for wanting to expedite.
I was part of the Master-at-Arms department back in the day. This was the type of guy who just wanted out and never considered the long term effects on their life.
I can identify with him...*
I considered what the long term effects would be, and I decided that I could not endure another three years of being mistreated because of my race and skin color.
* His circumstances are probably very different than what mine were, but I was standing right where he is in this video all the same.
The only thing that I did wrong is that I didn't consult a civil rights attorney to counsel me on what not to say and do until the proper authorities could investigate my claims.
"If I only knew then as a twenty two year old, that I know now"
He will regret it later on in life if he gets kicked out. Its worse then a prison record
@rickybrown2446
Not if he has certain opportunities, such as living in another country.
@@kidmack3556I truly feel so bad for you.. you choose the empty death of bitterness.. while. Christ.. died FOR His enemies. God bless you
@@micahsomers5934
My qualifications, which were supposed to afford me certain accommodations, were singlehandedly and arbitrarily withdrawn because of racial prejudice.
The recruitment office contacted me my brother in Christ!
I finished number four in my class of twenty two, had my Z card and sea time, and graduated fire school at the "Buttercup" in Norfolk.
After going through all of that, and being passed through prior service indoctrination because I was already more than familiar with the "playbook" and then only to get to my permanent duty station and then be told by the BMC in our initial interview, that I shouldn't strike for BM (I was already a military certified watercraft operator) because I "might get duty up on the Columbia River where I'm from and we dont like ----- people..."
"Empty death bitterness"? It's Full blooded bitterness.
So, I told you all of that to illustrate that if you haven't been in my boondockers, or in the case of this video, heard this seamans entire story... You aren't in a position to judge.
Legend has it this sailor is still acknowledging charges to this day.
He is no Sailor
How in the hell did he even make it in the navy and on a ship. Wow
@@joerosa170 I don't know what year it is but according to a recruiter I know the Navy has to basically accept any dysfunctional person. The ABSVAB doesn't screen people out. I hear people talking about physical standards but hardly anyone talks about the mental state of some of these folks they sign up.
legend has it some of the guys sitting in the back were laughing-they should be punished for thinking about legend has it
Probably still playing the victim to this day.
The sheer amount of contempt this sailor is expressing is mindboggling.
Skull-fucking must carry on.
Haha you have no idea about naval traditions and way of being😂. Seaman of all ages from the Vikings to modern navies understand what's happening here - the pull and push between the classes that has been part every navy, military or otherwise. Do read up on captain's or admirals mast. Which branch are you with shipmate?😂
@@donramanayake1505 I am Army, actually. I see where you are going with this because the Army has its own way of thumbing noses at officers, especially if a soldier feels wronged. Showing up to an Article 15 hearing (Army equivalent to Captains' Mast) looking like Joe-Shit the Ragbag doesn't help matters. Granted, the whole thing is over a dosimeter, but to me the sailor took it too far.
@@schwartzritterx5905 fair enough, and true maybe he did take it too far as you point out.
How did he ever get on a sub
"Son, fat drunk and stupid is no way to go through life."
*Dean Wormer..
Exactly. Why impersonate a white person?
He’s not fat 😂😂😂 definitely stupid
@@jsa4864You say this while most melanin have needles in their arm. 😂 🐒🐒🐒
@@jsa4864 We wuz important members of society n sheeeit
I went to Captain's Mast twice in my 20 year career. Fortunately, it was as a witness. First time the skipper asked me what I had to say, and I went through everything. The Skipper said to me "I read your fu*#ing report, what do you have to add"? Scared the crap outta me. About 2 months later, I had to appear again in front of the Skipper as a witness. He looked at me and said, "Petty Officer, what do you have to say"? I quickly replied, "It's all in my report sir". He got a crooked smile and told me "You're learning sailor".
Sounds like an asshole.
So you openly admit to being a snitch?
@@neilwilson4590imagine being so pathetic that you don't value honesty and accountability.
@@napalmpudding imagine being a proud snitch, even the officers you reported to disliked and distrusted you for being a snitch,
@@neilwilson4590good god, dude the military is not a street gang.
All of this is very simple. The guy wants out of the Navy.
Might as well let him out.
He's probably a liability to everyone around him.
After spending a few years in Leavenworth.
It certainly looks that way. In my day in the Royal Navy he would have been to Colchester with recommendation to be dismissed the service after 42 days retraining.
@@martinkeats4429then why bother sending him to Colchester? Just kick him out then and there
That makes sense. It reminds me of how Edgar Allen Poe showed up to drill at West Point naked except for his bandolier. He got his wish and was sent home.
I served on a fast attack sub on the eastern coast, having that much room to hold a mast like that we would have had to surface the boat. The captain mentioned that this was the third day of him being in front of him on charges. That blows my mind, three times, that means the more likely than not has more punishment to serve than what was doled out at this mast.
We had a sailor who couldn't make his qualifications board and he lost it and went nuts while standing topside watch. We were on liberty and got called back to the boat because of this. I had to take him to his court marshall and then the brig, that kid got 20 years of hard labor for pointing his topside weapon at the Captain and taking control of a Naval vessel. When I took him to the brig I was cuffed to him and the whole way he sobbed and begged me as a friend to help him escape. It broke my heart however he made his choices didn't study hard enough and wanted to party too much. I was lucky, I arrived at my boat on the day before a long underway and had nothing but time to work on my qualifications.
It all boils down to personal choices.
I'm currently on a fast attack. We had a guy in my division who was also sent to mast 3 times. His first time, he was extremely far behind on qualifications, so much so that they charged him with dereliction of duty. He made no progress over several weeks at a time. They couldn't necessarily prove it, so he was let off with a very stern warning. His second time, he was standing watch and some of the equipment went out of spec and he didn't let anyone know for several hours, in which they disqualified him and he had to restart all over again. He got knocked down in rank with half months pay for 2 months. (He consistently made watchstander errors over a period of time, but that was the nail in the coffin that got him to get masted). The final time, he was caught manipulating nuclear plant valves with no authorization. He's no longer a part of the command.
I don't know what happened to him, and good riddance.
Was he mismatched and was trying his best or did he just not care? Also, was he bullied to the point of breaking?
@@DoriansPortrait Bullied to the point of breaking that is a good possibility
The Navy is well known for bullying. The tone is set by the Command. There is some bad commands where the Captain and XO set stress high already it was in late 80s. But this duece bag is just disrespectful.
Tim what year was this?
The phrase "willful disregard" comes to mind. This man is a danger to himself, his ship and his crew. The Captain is showing tremendous restraint in just giving him a captains mast. Look at the reactions of the crew. The MA looks like he wants to deck him.
And he's on a nuclear missile sub, of all platforms.
How cany you be dumb enough to not wear ppe in a nuclear reactor.
Another guy here in the comments says he was there and this behavior went on for days
afterward to include... "he peed on the chief's table, injured a senior officer with a shower
head, banged on the hull." Unless all the movies I've seen about being on a sub are wrong,
even a sqweaker fart is a no-no on a sub. So to "bang on the hull" could have compromised
their position and done some grave harm to everyone.
At 3:20, the sailor cuts a loud fart while the captain is reading the charges. This guy wants to bring back keelhauling.
That was a highlight 💩
How could you tell who did that? Haha
I think it was the camera man. Not one person in that room reacted to it.
Lol holy .. I can’t stop 😂… I didn’t hear that at first
@jimmycorper guy who's head is left of captains head looks at sailors ass at the moment of the fart. I'm assuming there's also a delay on this camera/mic
My dad faced a captains mast for misappropriation of a case of Hamburgers from the mess inventory. He used them for a dive locker cookout. He was not punished, just scared into inviting the officers next time.
Lol
Unbelievable!
Love it! I have read similar stories from various ships during their deployment. May I ask what ship your dad was on?
3 days?? I’ve seen people get 45 days for underage drinking , this guy entered a rad area without a TLD, disrespected his entire COC, destroyed navy issued uniform items, etc. and gets 3 days???
That's max allowed by UCMJ for confinement with bread and water.
@joshuabaker5712 "Back in my day we were lucky to get bread and or water." -My Old Man
There is a guy in the comments who says he was there during this Mast. He said this guy got worse in subsequent days.
Underage drinking ???? So you can give your life but you can't drink a beer at 18 ?? We did in the 80's in boot camp ... that's bullshit !! so glad I'm not in today's pu ssi assed woke military with their stress cards ... they don't stop bullets, hardnosed GI's do
@@Bozbaby103could have predicted that
As a former Missile Tech on a Trident, seeing this guy on board a Trident scares the hell out of me.
Hats off to you MT your divs are usually chill n respectable
Welcome to the NEW Navy, where "Stand before the wiener" means exactly what it says!!!
@@AdrianInflorida as a former MT, you’re likely scared of many things. The dark…hard work…etc.
I feel the same way whenever they enter a gas station. I try to avoid proximity to them to avoid being enriched.
I went to captain's mast just for using curse words when arguing with a dude who outranked me by one. Even still, I stood in front of the captain and told the truth. He made me repaint two lifeboats and fully wax them, after duty hours. Most of the crew came on deck to help me, including the dude that i cursed out in the first place. The U.S Coast Guard is like that. I'm still proud I was one of them
I got busted with marijuana roach back in 74. Knowing the captain hates pot smokers, I straightened up, volunteered for anything and got a good write up from the navigator. When the captain said he didn't want any sailor steering his ship on pot, I acknowledged what he said and said it would not happen again and being a QM Meant everything to me. That raised his eyebrows and he told me that this was a freebee but not if it happened again. I got a $75 fine, no restrictions, and went on liberty that same day.
Very lucky for you. Most would get an instant dishonorable discharge.
Homie looks like he either had real good time or got rolled .
I think a lot of it has to do with your attitude after the incident happens. They want to see if you are able to acknowledge your fuck up, realize you need to do better, and show command you do WANT To be there. They will usually work with you if you are willing to do the work. I got a general discharge back in 2012 for smoking weed and going awol/reporting late. Ended up doing 5 months in the brig and a general discharge
@@THE-X-Force no, general under honorable conditions, dont be a dum dum
I got a question if a sailor is on leave and it's legal where they live can they smoke pot then or is it zero tolerance
I give the other sailors a lot of credit for being able to keep a straight face with this circus unfolding in front of them.
Really not that hard to keep a straight face when you're looking at a clown who is putting themselves and the entire crew in danger with their jackass behavior.
I don't think that sailor was going to win the MISTER MILITARY contest! And I don't think he was going to be Sailor Of The Year either!
I thought you were gonna mention the fart at 3:20
Your observation is poor,I’ve seen at least 3 laughing with their head turned.
I give them credit for not beating his ass after putting their lives in danger, disrespecting their CO, and just being a dumbass.
I was a Marine assigned as a brig guard back in '76. Sailors and Marines like this were sent our way. It didn't take long for them to have discipline reinstated during their little vacation spent with us.
We were nicknamed chasers by the troops we guarded during guarded work details
I believe that, I conformed involuntarily. Usmc 92-96
Marine brig guards were malicious, unrestrained psychopaths who would be serving prison time or hanged if they were civilians.
@@jamesday7344 Ahhhh James. Sometimes it takes a little motivation. You always had the discipline but sometimes it just needs some help being brought back out. Semper Fi Brother.
Good to know.
That guy’s a liability anywhere he goes in life.
Right now he is. But he could grow out of it.
@@royscott9162 Dude isn't growing out of this.
@@TheCoxManthis guy's natural habitat is some street corner in Philly or Chicago in da hood. That's probably where he'll thrive better.
He's in Congress now.
Back in the 70s, I was a Marine stationed on the USS Kennedy. I missed the liberty boat getting back to the ship. The liberty boat left 15 minutes early, but I was still UA. I ended up standing tall at mast. A Senior Chief in the shop I worked in spoke up in my behalf and told the Skipper I was a squared away Marine and it was the duty coxswain that left us ashore. The charges were dropped. Marines and Sailors don't always get along, but were always family. Never forgot that!
I thought this had to be a joke when he first walked in with that wrecked uniform.
I did too!😂
@@lt.petemaverickmitchell7113 RIGHT?! lmao.
I thought the same. I've never seen anything like it. I was in the Navy for about 14 years. I got out as an HM1. (I had trouble with my prt and was forced out. Still got an Honorable Discharge. (I had undiagnosed medical problems preventing me from passing.)
He must be trying to get out.
Me too. Then I saw the ship’s name patch on his shoulder as he was walking out. This is an example of someone who does not take his job and duty seriously. I’m sure it all seemed like fun and games to him up to this point in his life. Feels weird watching this.
I was like 😮
Former Army Officer here. This sailor clearly doesn’t want to be in the Navy. It is a privilege he doesn’t deserve. I certainly hope he didn’t receive anything other than a dishonorable discharge.
It ain’t a privilege. They pay you to do it. The military is a joke.
Wouldn't get dishonorable or BVD, only a military judge can issue that, he would get general or OTH
You can't get a dishonorable discharge from a NJP, you can only get that from a court martial.
He needed out of the Military service. He clearly wasn't suitable. I do feel bad for him, but, he clearly needs and wants to be a civilian
and a lifetime bar to reenlistment.
As an African American retired Chief, it is hard to watch this young sailor throw his life away.
career "MAYBE", "life" not at all. I'm an army brat, USAF vet and have worked with the army since 2005. I've seen plenty of E-9s that were NJPd 2 or 3 times. MOST things are recoverable.
your're a kind man
I heard he's playing standup bass in a Rockabilly band, nowadays.
I was a PACE instructor for 7 trips, and this seems the worst I have seen. All of the African American sailors were top notch in my book.
I can’t stand that African American term. Just leave it out of the comment and say as a retired Chief, If you don’t, it sounds like you are apologizing for him being black and how it looks on other black sailors. I look at it like we are Americans, and this guy is a shitbag who happens to be black and should have never went to boot camp.
As everyone that graduates boot camp is advanced in rank from E1 to E2, and this sailor is once again an E1, I have to believe that this is not the first time he has been to Captain's Mast.
Apparently, some comments are saying (I didn't catch it in the video, myself) that it's his THIRD Mast in as many days. I'm guessing he already got reduced one pay grade once... maybe even TWICE. Regardless, whether it's the first or third time at Mast, there's no hope for him. They need to get him off that boat ASAP.
Had an "old fart" in our brigade; you could see ALL the ranks he'd been thru, and back down on his uniform stitching; even too cheap to get new uniforms; he must have been 50 or so, with a bad attitude, so he got craps jobs all the time.
Not in the Navy.. gotta wait 9 months
Navy doesn't advance E1's to E2 out of boot camp.
you got it
This is the type of person the Navy insists on keeping around while they tell the ones that reach high year tenure to leave.
100%
I’ve been to Captain’s Mast a few times. I had anger issues along with other things. Had some great Chiefs and Officers in my corner and I was eventually able to turn it around… now, 13 years in… I’m a living witness that it’s never too late and every Sailor deserves a chance.
This lunatic has more charges against him than the Nazi’s at Nuremberg and he is sentenced to 3 days confinement with bread and water. MORE than merciful punishment by the Captain.
And, any reader should know that the USS Wyoming is a ballistic missile submarine! How does a guy like this with more screws loose than a 1950 Studebaker, even get in the submarine service? The US Navy has seriously lowered their standards. Get this dude off the boat asap!
I see your point, but recruits really have no way of knowing what they're getting into when they enlist. Alot of people are just not capable of adapting to this lifestyle.
Morons what do u expect
@@micclayBS we are adults when we join and know EXACTLY what’s ahead of us
@@micclay Submarine crews are supposed to be volunteers first, then carefully screened for psychological compatibility with submarine service, THEN extensively trained for the duty--unless the sailor somehow gamed the system.
By his poor behavior, he materially endangered the submarine and her crew.
Yep DEI has infected the US Military. It's so tragic. This goof has no business on a Sub. I wouldn't let him be janitor of a land based TPU building.
3 masts in 3 days has to be some sort of Navy record!
We had a guy that had a Capt mast in the morning and somehow got a DUI at lunch the same day. He was brought back and the Capt. Did another mast around 1630.
@@enriquegacel6285 Were they all alcohol related?
As a retired veteran he should be discharged and be served criminal charges
I'm going to go out on a limb and assume he won't be doing a full 20 years.
Correct. He has a 30 year career and will finish as MCPON
He went to BUD/s after this video and was on the Bin Laden raid.
Well, he might do 20 years in Leavenworth. LOL!
I don’t think he had 20 day’s in him 😉
He became a pilot after realizing the water wasn't for him and served with the Blue Angels demo team
The armed forces has two ranks that are difficult to punish: E-1 and O-10. The top Generals/admirals are untouchable, and E-1s cannot be busted down in rank
guess you never heard of being sent to the brig, restriction to ship, and rations reduced to bread and water.
@@williewonka6694 Many GOOD sailors are treated far worse than that every day. Some cannot handle it and kill themselves. That idiot at Captain's Mast got his hand slapped.
@@williewonka6694 those days went away in 2019....you old salt
Not to mention in the latter case, they often already have the worst jobs. As to the top flag/general officers, they're already well beyond minimum time in service to retire with full benefits honestly, so what are you going to do? They'll just resign worst case.
@Gil Corazon kind of difficult to do when you are 300 feet under the ocean, somewhere you are not technically suppose to be lol. Quick Administrative separations are routine within surface and shore commands but subs? Yeah, not so much.
I can'r freaking belive this!!!!!!!!! I knew Livers in Sub school. I worked with him at RTC when we were on hold before that. This big headed idiot then became a smart allack, trash talking pain in the butt! I heard about his Captain's Mass. Shoot, I heard about how he was shutting the hot water off for the officers' showers. Livers cutting his white during Captain's mass was legendary. Last i heard, he was processed out of the Navy in 24 hours. Holy crap! thank you for posting this.
You knew this guy? Guess he wanted out bad, when was this? video look early 2000s
I don't know if this comment is true or not, but if it is it would be nice if you could provide more backstory in context please.
@@gregorybentley5707 ok so after bootcamp, I was sent to a holding unit for blood in my urine. Livers was later assigned there for some reason. Holding unit was on NTC (Navy Training Command). We were assigned to work at the clinic on Recruit Training Command. This is all at Great Lakes. At Holding Unit, he was modest and humble. Not one issue. When we got to Sub School in Groton, Connecticut, Livers began to show his true face. I first remember him telling people to "carry on" when he wanted them to stop talking to him. He did this to our instructor in the middle of class. The instructor chewed him out in front of the class. Well, after sub school, we went to Missile Technician school on Kingsbay. That kid would play the "Hulk Hogan" theme on repeat as loud as possible. He just seemed to love negative attention.
After we raduated, we got sent to all our boats. I remember other guys who graduated MT school before me asking what was up with Livers. He was a massive pain t them.
Well, eventually word got out that Livers got Captain Massed and eventually booted out of the Navy. I wasn't aware it was several masses. I did hear about the bread and water punishment and how he sliced up his uniform.
What followed was Livers shuttiing off the hot water heater to the officers' shower.. There was a switch where he was being held in Missile Control Center in a tunnel we nicknamed (at least on my sub) "The WineCellar".
If what I was told is true, He cussed out and interrupted the Captain during another mass. COB shouted at him and the Captain stopped the COB. He dismissed Livers then preceded to tell the Yeoman to process Livers out in 24 hours. The crew was in port for this. Anyway, the Missile Techs grabbed trash bags and a duty van and evicted Livers from his barracks room. They cut up Livers' Navy ID, left him at the parking lot outside the base with his belongings. The end. Fortunately, Livers was from Augusta, Goergia. 4 hours away or less. I was stationed on the USS Lousiana.
@@hindflight yes. We got in 2001. This had to be 2004 or 2005. Yeah we were in Medical Holding unit, Submarine school, and missile technician school together.
@@gregorybentley5707backstory? How’s this?
A couple of days before this, he would put his leg up on a chair , after smearing food scraps out of the “wet can” on his bald head, and pretend to be Hulk Hogan. Or this backstory, he was found with feces covered battery’s in his rack. Also…he was given more chances to fix himself than you’d likely believe.
I myself have been to Captain's Mast for the violation of article 93 and 112, and I can tell you from experience that it is a truly terrifying experience for any sailor who wishes to stay in in the Navy. Fortunately for me, prior to that I was an exemplary representation of the Navy's core values and a valuable asset to my command. Therefore, the CO and my chiefs decided that I was indispensable to the common cause and elected to retain me in the service. I was sentenced to 90 days restriction, half month's pay time 3, and required to attend 6 months of AA unconditional to terms of sentencing under threat of immediate termination in the event I violated any of these terms. I later went on to receive a NAMP and upon my honorable discharge from the Navy, an LOA. The scene of this video is one of the worst punishments that could befall any sailor, which is called an "open mast" in which the entire command is present. I was witness to one such mast, in which an airman of our command was found guilty of intentionally sabotaging one of our aircraft before a flight op. It was not a pretty sight to say the least.
Why did you get one? Drinking too much?
@@andymaciver1760 Drinking on duty (article 112 + article 92) and one additional 112 charge of "drunk on duty", which I wasn't I'd only have 3 beers, but I wasn't about to contest it by taking it to a court martial so I just took the punishment. I got 90 days restriction, busted down to E2, half-month's pay times 2, and mandatory AA meetings for 6 months. It was the most severe punishment one could get without being kicked out the military (my CO was a bit of a douche). Nobody liked him, so I think he felt like he always had something to prove. He sure made his point with me.
Sabotaging an aircraft? And he only got an Article 15 (Captain's Mast)? Seems to me that that's the kind of thing that can get a fella 10 years at Leavenworth!!!
@@jackfitzpatrick8173 I was about to say, an aircraft? Man his boat mates must have handled with him separately that endangers everyone on the ship!
Combat flight op or peace time? Both are serious because he is risking the life, or lives, of the aircraft Crew. But, one is somewhat more upsetting, since it is directly aiding a hostile force.....
8 years on the boats never once even heard of Captains Mast at sea. He has to be the biggest f up in submarine history.
I definitely agree. I was surface warfare, but the bubble heads I knew were extremely squared away. 4.0 in every respect.. And most were very intelligent; being on a nuke, it is a minimum requirement. This sailor is a distraction, and is definitely unfit for duty.
Served on 4 fast attack subs and never even heard of a mast at sea...this guy obviously has reached a point where he didnt give a f...he should have never been allowed on patrol, this should have been handled at squadron
@@jimdunlap7255 I think it was held on a Sub Tender, AS- probably in Guam, "Blue crew" or Gold Crew.
Multitasking at its finest. Meanwhile, while this circus is happening, we were a mobile underwater missile silo, on Alert.
@@jimdunlap7255it’s fairly common now , I served on SSBN for the past 5 years. I’ve seen 5 mast at sea and was deployed 7 times. 4/5 were due to vapin on board.
My father was a submariner for 26 years, culminating as a squadron commander of three divisions with 21 nuclear attack submarines. I walked into his office on base one day and his yeoman told me he was conducting a Captain's Mast, which I had no idea what that was at the time. I waited in the anti room and was able to overhear every word that my Dad was saying and the responses of the sailor in question. Interesting memory and experience.
So you were privy to legal proceedings, illegally? You might want to delete your post.
Captain's Mast is a non-judicial proceeding. No attorneys. No transcript. No judge. The CO is judge, jury and executioner. @@jasonm949
@@jasonm949 Numbskull. Captain’s Mast is a non judicial process. Moreover, Courts Martial is like any other civilian court trial as anyone with base access may attend. Anyone who the CO grants access may witness a Captain’s Mast or Office Hours and whatever the Army and Air Force did in their place. That’s unusual but not prohibited.
@@ChrisHyde537 Not civilians, brainiac. If the OPs dad was what he says he was, he's easy to look up. Lol.
@@jasonm949 What exactly was illegal about waiting in the area outside his office, on a couch, where the yeoman told me to wait? Oh, and BTW, this was in 1978, 45 years ago....
And this is why we don't need judges to sentence criminals to military service
My only question is how did this man do this all sober.
He could have been baked!
😆
He didn't
I was a Recruit Company Commander 1987-1989 in San Diego. Whenever I was mashing my Recruits, I would lecture them "Out there in the fleet, there is no mashing or marching party! There is Captains Mast! Rest assured! If you ever go to mast, you will wish that you could reset the situation with push ups, sit ups, flutter kicks, jumping jacks, and 8 count body builders!" Years later, I met up with someone I put through basic and he informed me that when he went to mast, my words were echoing in his head. "You were soooo riiight!"
Company 248 ?
@@KermitCreech 239
I graduated there in august 86 did you know AEC Marriot? He was our commander
@@KermitCreech 239
@@cmphighpower Knew of him but was not close
Is that man’s fly wide open in the captain’s face or am I trippin?
He destroyed his own uniform so they made him wear it to captains mast.
He wants out of the navy and doesn't seem worried about a dishonourable discharge.
He's a damn fool
@rayhewitt4688 he is a fool but not for wanting out he's a fool for not just doing his time and getting out without getting in trouble.
You can't get a dishonorable discharge with an Article 15 Captain's Mast. The command would have to detail a General Court Martial for that. He's likely looking at getting an administrative "Other Than Honorable" discharge for a "pattern of misconduct." An OTH discharge is the lowest characterization of service for an administrative separation (lower than "General Under Honorable). You lose most veteran's benefits with an OTH.
I've seen people get convicted of felonies and not get a dishonorable.
OMG, I was there for this! I can't believe this is online! It was about 2003 and is 100% real. The crew isn't laughing because we were completely shocked by it all. It continued for a couple more days after this: he peed on the chief's table, injured a senior officer with a shower head, banged on the hull. It was absolute bonkers!
What ended up happening to that guy?
@@luispacheco7096 after a few more days of it getting worse, we had to come off alert patrol and small boat transfer him off. I don't know what happened to him after that. I assume a separation of some kind. We never saw him again.
What happend to him
Yeah, sure.
Do they have a makeshift brig in a sub.. this guy is a danger to the crew and should be under full custody.
This guy is a prime example of why lowering standards is a bad idea.
The very definition of someone who fell through the cracks.
I was on the recieving end of a couple of Captain's Masts, mainly from just being a dumb kid and not always listening to my senior chief. It never once crossed my mind to be this disrespectful to my superiors, always stood at attention, and would always be respectful.
How do you do confinement on a sub? Guess he's finding out that the Navy is a little bit stricter than the gangs back home. He must have been the teachers's favorite back in school.
@@CSltz I would guess that he was handcuffed to his bed in a diaper for the three days. Maybe they have a bed in the Captain's office to keep him away from fellow soldiers that would assist him in cheating on his ordered diet of bread and water.
Woah, I'm not military but I as a former commercial diver and underwater welder I've worked with a bunch of these fine gentlemen. From the stories they've told me I believe this sailor got let off extremely light. Especially after disrespecting the captain like that directly in front of him. I've worked on civilian ships where if you ever talked to the captain like that you'd be swimming home. That Captain has the patience of a saint.
Low expectations
They might have been trying to get him off the sub, and going into port after that three days. I'm not sure about the navy, but in the army they can't get rid of someone if he's on punishment phase.
I did something out of character in 1986 and went to Captain's Mast for slipping away during lunch while the ship was in home port. I returned with a pitcher of beer in my gut and no experience with the reality of alcohol. My leadership was very kind to me and gave me a chance to do better. I feel really sorry for this guy- he has no idea how good life can be if you don't sabotage yourself.
Do you enjoy lying
I have no sympathy for that dirt bag. And 2 months half pay for an E1 is nothing. I saw a guy lose 2 stripes and 3 months at half pay for one lie. Guy was an E4 in the fat club and we were in a place that wasn't really a base. He had to report in his weight but they checked up on him and found he was lying. He was not on an active warship. Mast came down hard on him and took him longer than usual to climb back to E3. Don't know if he ever made E4.
No sympathy for that guy and he was tying to play the race card too for some stupid ass reason.
What has become of my Navy? SMH.
Funny. I don't feel sorry for him at all.
@@weebee6922 your navy lol
@@morwitzer34 I don't either
Over 2 decades in the military, and I had never seen somebody face so many charges in an Article 15 - Captain's Mast - Office Hours - UCMJ. That absolutely blew my mind watching this.
He sure racked them up, didn't he?
It's the New WOKE Military!
Get Used to it.
I've faced about 4 charges on my Article 15. It was from a POS platoon sergeant who was trying to wash me. One of them was accusing me of not shaving when I did. I ended up getting a lawyer and ALL charges were dropped. I moved to a better unit and did not have a single issue after that. Some leaders just want to see you fail.
With 12 years active duty in Surface Warfare and Naval Aviation, I don't know how this guy was not dismissed via Summary Court Martial; this was apparently not his first time at NJP (Mast). I certainly would not want him on a Nuclear Submarine.
Actually, the CO could convene a special court martial in this case, as he has the jurisdictional authority by virtue of being commanding officer of a Naval vessel as provided by the US Code.
Everyone, except SR Numbnuts, is wearing poopie suits, so I guess the boat is either in port ready to get underway, or actually underway. I'm guessing the CO decided to forego the administrative nightmare such a court would represent and hammer on him under Article 15. Were I he, though, I'd have that little puke off my boat at first opportunity.
Poopy suits have been SOP since I assume forever, underway at least 2000-06
Summary court-martials are only for those that turn down NJPs.
I believe the captain said something about it being 3 days in a row he has held mast on him. That due might have been higher rank 1 or 2 days prior than a seaman.
@@derekhamel2991 I got my first set of poopie suits on my second patrol in late 1973. The style may have changed, but the same thinking is evident. Damned boats still smell like diesel fuel, armpit and old socks though.
I served in the Royal Navy and if I spoke to the Captain like he did no matter what I would be toast
or show up like that either i know different service but the captain i was under would have flipped if the brought some one in to mast looking like that
With beans on that toast. Because apparently the Brits do that 🤔
Hard to believe that fool was on a nuclear ballistic missile submarine in the first place
"Dass booshit..."
How the hell did this delta bravo pass the ASVAB let alone get admitted to the Navy?
We had a few of these in the Air Force.
Got rid of them fast.
That's because the ASVAB is easy. If you don't pass that then you need to re-evaluate your life
What happens when a recruiter has a quota to meet.
dem b lacks folks are something else
Fascinating to see as a complete outsider.
How to get a dishonorable discharge as soon as you reach the dock
I stumbled on this and I was shocked to hear him speak to his commanding officer in this manner. He should be put out the service - full stop!
Should have been keelhauled
Thats what he trying to do. He doesn't want to be in the Navy and is trying to get a separation.
I was thinking that too ,not sure why they didnt make him redress at least ,that should have been the first thing ,next I wonder if he is the only black on that ship ? everybody I see in that room is white .@@springbloom5940
The new face of the USN.
@@alanjohnson6091 I saw this type of thing 40 years ago. It's nothing new.
Former Submariner and also served on a surface ship(skimmer).....we had weekly Captains Masts on the surface ship. One guy would not report to the Wardroom for mast...so the CO had the podium taken to berthing and held it next to the guys rack. Every port we pulled into there were 5-15 guys put in a Mike boat and taken ashore for separation. There were a lot of personality disorders on that ship. Conversely, one Mast in 4 years on the submarine.
It takes a mentally tough individual to even contemplate volunteering for submarine duty.
I have to agree, as a Marine, submariners were some locked &cocked, outstanding 'squids'. (sorry, I can't help myself). That's why this is so baffling to me.
This one's for North Korea. As former CG PO2 I've seen my share of "misfits"... but d*mn... and on a submarine. It was always my understanding that only the best were allowed to volunteer for that duty. An Article 15 (3 days) was too soft. Summary or Special Court for that one. Followed by Bad Conduct DC ! If not possible under op conditions, then confinement until port.
I was on subs 8 years and don't recall a single mast. Wait I take that back, we had a junior MS that was a bit of a fuck up that got masted once.
EVERY job in the military is IMPORTANT. But there are some of a "higher order"... that have a direct bearing on the security of this nation. The Corps calls it "manning the wall" or something like that. The "boomers" (subs) packing ICBMs are part of the higher order. And there's NO room for phuck ups or miscreants. No matter what the sailor's rate/rating is. The CO gets on the 1MC for GQ / Battle Stations, there's NO place for Seaman Recruit and his attitude. Lives are in play
THIS IS FASCINATING... I WAS IN THE U.S. ARMY, MY DAD IN THE U.S. NAVY DURING VIETNAM & SERVED IN NAM 1965/66 & GOT SICK FROM AGENT ORANGE... A POSITIVE ATTITUDE & EXPLANATION & JUST OVERALL PROFESSIONALISM/ MATURITY WILL GO ALONG WAY IN THE MILITARY & LIFE... CAN I GET A WITNESS??? 😇🙏🛐..SEAKREST OUT... 🎱
I served from 1975-1997. No sailor in my Navy would have EVER been allowed to show up at a Captains Mast in a uniform looking like that. No CO that I ever worked for would have ever entertained a proceeding with a sailor displaying such disrespect for the uniform. What the hell has become of the Navy??
Also seemed this troubled sailor was let off with a lighter punishment. I believe the military has a racial background quota that they need to keep filled. Otherwise, this sailor would have gotten actual justice instead of a slap on the wrist. In addition, I truly believe this sailor has a mental disorder of some kind; might even be a sociopath.
I believe it’s okay if they don’t want to punish him the way they should have, but at least immediately escort him off the ship in case he thinks of physically harming one of his fellow sailors.
Safety of all sailors on this ship should be considered when deciding where this troubled sailor should stay.
I hope this sailor finds the guidance or therapy he needs before heading into the wrong path in life.
I’m sure there’s worse sailors than this one, and glad he’s not the worst of sailors. But could also see this sailor becoming the worse if not properly guided or given therapy.
Forced therapy treatment would have been a better sentence for this sailor. What if this sailor is going through something from back at home and doesn’t know how to admit he needs help.
HE destroyed his own uniform. I believe this was them humiliating him and making him wear the uniform he himself destroyed.
In the late 90s whenever they started changing a lot of stuff, i saw it transition into a newer, gentler, kinder type attitude, in a way im glad i didnt reenlist, they really really brought standards, and tough reformation way way down. No way in the world the chain of his command would have seen this as being acceptable back in the old days.
Wokeness
@@MorrowPlays That would certainly fit their style. With the drift away from corporal punishment, motivation had to get more psychiatric. In a voluntary service, mustering out seems the best solution to me. The Navy's not responsible for curing his psychoses.
he gave him every chance he could before doing this ...this guy was a complete hazard
Lack of respect was killing me. I wanted to understand this man but he took away all chances being disrespectful.
Speaking as a US Army Vietnam Veteran (US Army 505th PIR 82nd Airborne Division), I must say that I totally admire and respect the outstanding Men and Women of our amazing US NAVY. I South Vietnam I worked closely with US NAVY Combat boat crews that operated and fought from a combat river craft called a PBR (Patrol Boat River). The Navy personnell manning this armed combat craft were as tough, disciplined, and brave as any Troops I had ever known! So, when I see the disrespect, and confrontational attitude of this serviceman, I say, Serviceman because I don't believe this man has earned the right to be called, Seaman or Sailor, yet. While I served, I had nothing but the utmost respect for all of my Officers, and All Officers of Any Branch of our Military. We were not only trained this way, we also Wanted to feel this Way. Our Officers did a remarkable job in a nightmare of a WAR. And, every one of we enlisted personnell admired and respected them. And, even if there was an Officer that a Troop may not particularly like, he, or she, sure as hell Respected that Officer. This is one of the items that makes a strong and ready Elite Military Force. There's no place for a disgruntled misfit such as this Serviceman. In combat, this is the type of person that will get himself killed along with a couple of his Battle Buddies. Again, my sharpest Salute goes to the Outstanding Men and Woman, enlisted or officers, of the unbeatable United States Navy! BRAVO!
AATW! H-Minus.
TRUE RABBIT TRUE @@Cobra-ky9bt
My grandfather was MP in Vietnam, and he was tasked with patrolling to look for deserters.
He'd find them trying to hop the fence late at night, yell "Hey you! Stop!" and then run over to give them a lift over the fence, lol.
Lots of respect for that
Im not a submariner, but we had a seaman report aboard the ship (Spruance Class Destroyer) a few days before our deployment. During the deployment he refused to get up for watch. Even refused to get out of his rack. Wew had everyone from our chief to the command master chief and chief master at arms try to get him to get up. He was resolute and remained in his rack. We departed Everett Washington, and this incident happened en route to the middle east. By the time we hit our first port in Hong Kong, he was packed up and gone from the ship. To this day I dont know what happened to him other than they kicked him off the ship.
He probably makes a mean Big Mac.
I think I've heard about that guy. Were you on a ship with Joe Holliday?
Pouting like a baby! Pulling out the race card! What a hero 😂
3:20 is the magic moment many of you came here for.
I thought I was imagining that 😂😂😂
imagine if he shook it out 🤣🤣🤣
Ought to be a court martial offence on a submarine. It's got nowhere to go.
"Three days confinement and bread and water"? For all the shit he was charged with?
I'd say he got off light.
He did. I expected 45 days restriction, 45 day extra duty, half months pay of 2 months.
The conundrum of military service where your service helps protect the rights that civilians have that you signed away so weird.
I served aboard ship from 76 to 82. I've never been close to captain's mast. I had no idea the ship's (or boat's) company could attend. Also surprised this video made it into public.
MY first ship had a brig and a Marine detachment aboard. As a young sailor I once had to stand a brig turnkey watch. The guy in the bring was on 3 days bread and water. When it came time to eat, two marine's came down and we all went to the marine berthing compartment. The two marines stood him next to the water fountain and handed him a bag of wonder bread. They told him to eat as much as he liked. I remembering thinking I should keep my nose clean because 3 days bread and water sucks.
I observed two NJP’s when I was in. One of them was an NJP for two E-4’s in the command who had been arrested for DUI over the same weekend. The CO required all E-4 and below to attend because he wanted to prevent more incidents through showing the junior enlisted what it’s like to answer for a DUI. I’ve never seen someone sentenced to bread and water, though. I’d be surprised if that is still a thing in 20 or even 10 years.
My brother supervised a guy on bread on water and he said the prisoner got the idea his punishment was that he had to eat as much bread and water as he possibly could. After about 4 loaves they asked him what the hell he was doing and told him he wasn't required to stuff himself.
@@lilm8411 I didn’t know that “bread and water” was an all you can eat buffet.
Wonder Bread!? What are they trying to do? Kill him? That stuff is the worst.
It was on a sub.
You are in the Navy on a ship of war, Dingus. Not in kindergarten anymore. What a piece of work....
I went on the carpet before the Captain 1 time in 8 years for stoopid crap that happened in my engineroom. Got a thorough dressing down and received no punishment and nothing placed in my record. Flew right and straight after that. Good Captain.
My nephew joined the Navy and one of the discipline stories was one guy's task was to keep a section of sidewalk immaculate. One day a pigeon dropped a white bomb on it and landed. He walked over and tried to kick it.... Well one of his uppers saw it, lost his mind and gave him his punishment. From that day and until he graduated every time he saw a pigeon he had to stop and salute it.
Thats some b.s., hopefully karma caught up to his upper.
THIS is funny...........
The Lesson: Orders were to keep the sidewalk immaculate. Nothing was mentioned about harming birds being birds. His duty was to clean up the white bomb, not kick the bird.
Good one! You made me squirt my water out of my nose and all over my bag of Wonderbread!
USAF E7(RET)
Things do change. Old guy here, enlisted and officer, Navy and Marine Corps. In the sixties and seventies, it was very easy to get Captains Mast. But it was also easy, if you worked hard and kept your attitude easy to get promoted again. Many people don't know how this system of justice works. It actually works pretty well. In those days having been busted or having a Mast wasn't necessarily held against you...as an enlisted person. I do know of one case where the enlisted man refused Mast and requested Court Marshall. As a result, his foolish CO was let go by the Navy and the enlisted guy was found innocent.
I enlisted USN in 1970 and I concur. In the 1970s, if a sailor went to Captain's Mast, he could redeem himself with hard work and a good attitude.A BM3 that I worked for was busted a couple of times before I met him, from SN to SA and then from BM3 to SN. He was BM3 when I met him. After that, he made BM2 then got busted to BM3. About a year later, CO reinstated him to BM2. He made BM1 before he left the ship and retired as a BMC. Years later, when we re-connected in about 2016 he said that he was a good sailor but a poor military man.
Even in 05 - 11 when I was in the Army as long as it wasnt for a DUI an article 15 didn't actually harm your career. You might miss 1 look for E7/8 and may not make 9 depending on your peer group but we had a saying, fk up move up. Most people took the article 15 on the chin, and turned their career around. No one held it against you at your unit, it was considered a clean slate. Got demoted to E4 from E5? You're at the board a year later and will turn around and go to the E6 board as soon as you hit time in grade requirements.
Of my team leader, squad leader, platoon sergeant, first sergeant, and CSM, only my team leader didn't have an article 15. And they weren't ashamed of them, they always used it to help keep you motivated. They were open with it. Told everyone at every article 15.
The problem with promotion is that it's tied in with reenlistment. If you're not promotable, chances are you would be denied reenlistment. Thankfully back in your day, that meant you can reenlist even after a demotion event. But nowadays one demotion can be enough; it's a matter of terms and tenure. Obviously the safest branch anyone knows would be Army, and I think we all know why that is at the core.
I don't know if it's just because that professional society in general has gotten so risk-averse and so nonconfrontational that they believe the right person is right 100% of the time. Then again, this also hinges on the politics of personnel numbers at the time, and whether it's wartime or peacetime. The latter is understandably worse for military justice.
I would like the youth to be best educated on this before they would even DARE consider enlistment or commission.
Getting busted down but coming back actually looks better one of my RDCs was like that and was a role model
Getting busted down but coming back actually looks better one of my RDCs was like that and was a role model
Sailing a ship requires intense focus and determination. Even a moments loss of concentration by any crew member can cause the ship to veer dangerously off course, leaving the ship lost at sea and quite possibly unable to locate land again.
Someone did not do their duty to select this man for service on a submarine, they should be accountable.
Something happened to him along the way. Either he managed to hide his attitude well enough to pass the schooling. There's always a few people in every unit like this. Also lots of people that get into trouble on occasion but aren't bad as a whole.
I knew a guy in the Air Force that was a retired E-9 he once much earlier in his career had gotten an article 15 for getting drunk and wrecking a day room before an inspection.
This guy here seems like he's trying to get a discharge.
How the hell did this kid make it to an SSBN?
My dad served in WWII as a baker. He remained in the Reserves and eventually rose to Command MasterChief Fire Control.
This disrespectful sailor is an embarrassment to the Navy. Lucky that he wasn’t of another time as he would have been summarily lashed with a whip or drawn and quartered and fed to the fish.
He obviously has little to no respect for the chain of command or his fellow shipmates. He should do hard time for his behavior and be dishonorably discharged in my opinion.
I learned while in the military that the guy in charge of dudes like this need to have a sit down 1 on 1 talk man to man. Most of the time there is something going on in the guys life and he doesn’t know what to do. We had a guy acting a fool and we finally got smart and talked to him and discovered all his problems. We helped him out and dude wasn’t a problem for the rest of my time with him
My whole time in the USMC I never saw anything like this. Listening to him, I wouldn’t even want to have him near my platoon.
This is an example of a mental breakdown; I really believe that most people cannot handle being on a submarine.
Bs…
It’s a personal defect of character. Full stop.
Most come out of sub service just fine..,no issues. Not a one.
This boy is a clown…
Boy..a child…no shape or form of a man here.
Bread & water. Wow, I’ve seen a few Captains masts and been in two myself. Never have I seen bread and water.
I got a DUI in 2002, I got 90 days in the brig 3 days bread and water, when you finally take a dump it’s like your giving birth
was on a carrier for 5 months before nuc school. The CO was a WWII pilot and very frequently awarded both brig time as well as bread and water. Never heard of either one while on a fast attack for four years.
20 years on subs 3 masts (2 deserved 1 bullshit lmao) never saw it folks are more likely to just get separated
I was on the Shiloh under Capt. Aycock. He gave it out so much, that the rest of the waterfront was even horrified.
@@dfunkfatsack4512 90 days AND bread and water? That's sus
How did that sailor pass screening? The risk he put his fellow shipmates in is grievous. I sincerely hope the Navy made that young man serve the entirety of his term. No doubt he was going to continue to be disruptive until he was off the boat. BZ to the CO for maintaining his professionalism. I don't think I could have.
I certainly hope they DIDN'T make him serve it, and instead handed him a dishonorable discharge ASAP and sent him on his way.
@@Shadowrunner340 Unfortunately, a dishonorable discharge cannot be awarded as part of NJP. A dishonorable is only awarded at General court martial.
Recruiters gotta eat too
Should of made him don cement shoes and threw the son of a b overboard
It's a new thing called equity. It has replaced merit in the US military.
I don't understand how this sailor's chief would even allow him to present himself in that condition in front of the captain.
I think it was proof of his berserk behavior.
@@redr1150r I understand your comment, but I would still maintain that his immediate chief was negligent in letting this sailor appear before the captain dressed like that.
Pretty sure it came from the captain as would need his permission to relax uniform he wants them in. Making example of him.
@@cbozant3428 Still, it was a pretty bad visual image for the USN.
@@JohnDumas-w5z that was its intended purpose. I’m sure it’s why co had all hands and recorded it. Probably played it on tv for rest of the crew. Looks like they were underway since it was on mess deck. Only option was to borrow one but then you have the wrong rank as nobody still a seamen.
I've met this exact same type of Sailor back in my days. They try and escape their hood life by joining the Navy and then they bring that hood mentality to the Fleet.
The Army has this but on land 😂
CLASSIC!
3:20 someone buated ass right in the middle of the co talking!
Hilarious!!!!!!😅😂
I thought I was tripping lol
Yep
LMAO😂😂😂😂😂😂
Navy chow at work. God did the boat smell. I don't miss those days
As a Brigs Correction Specialist I was on duty when an LT. (O3) brought a prisoner to the ship's brig. As I examined the confinement order I discovered that the prisoner underwent a confinement prior to his Article 15 hearing. (Captain's Mast). This meant the prisoner was prejudged. The prisoner was sentenced to 3 days B & W and his CO's Mast was held around 2200 and the day of mast counts as a day of confinement. The prisoner had to undergo a confinement physical the next morning (day 2) and was released the following day after spending less than 2 days in the Brig.
Whoa! This is so disheartening, but surely needed. This sailor is a danger to this command. Chief of the Boat, this tells me this was aboard a submarine. For me, this warrants a BCD at least.
Aboard the Wyoming (SSBN 742), same homeport as my boat, Rhode Island in Kings Bay.
In the Army this process was nicknamed kangaroo court. I was on the wrong side of the carpet twice in twenty years. I can see why it was needed especially aboard a ship but today is more of a relic we continue to do because because we’ve never been told to stop. Much like 24 hours of watching over a building even though the telephone and fire sprinkler has made your purpose redundant.
he got off easy ... he was clearly trying for a big chicken dinner (bad conduct discharge) to go
When I was in the Coast Guard, some of our crews would start fights, and lose fights, then show up at Morning Quarters stumbling up the gangway looking a lot worse for wear. We had a great captain that somehow drug us through our teen age years. We were very respectful to our superiors and ready to take risks for our job, like fighting fire on an abandoned Greek freighter and going out into hurricane conditions around Puerto Rico.
Navy Vet who was a shore based SP and had attended several Captains Masts, and Court Marshalls but have never seen a Sailor show up with a uniform like that. What a disgrace.
With that many charges against him for numerous military violations, this dude could've been court-martialed & be given a less-than-honorable discharge or a bad conduct discharge for being a bad conduct, audaciously disrespectful, disruptive behavior & flouts authorities. Shame on him! 😠😠
I think he either was trying to get kicked out or he has been getting hazed and not saying anything.
Most realistic comment in this entire comment section.
he wants out
As a minority immigrant who served in the military in the 80's, I can tell you that no one gets hazed unless he's a complete sh*tbag and you literally have to ask for it.
@@thebigmonthat’s bullshit and you know it the navy has a long known history of hazing
I wonder if it's both. He's got that weird combination of defiant and demoralized. The people in the room clearly don't like him, but we don't know how things got to that point.
We had a guy like this on my ship USS ANTIETAM CG-54 between the years 94-96 we called him Fruitie he was always getting in trouble for something stupid like not getting up for watch sleeping on watch disobeying orders he went to Captain Mast 3x and the Captain said the Navy not for you just do your time and get out don't come back to see me anymore please and you know what he had to see him one more time then he got kicked out we all talked to him because the reason he was getting in trouble was pure stupid he just didn't care
Dude I just left this ship last year that’s wild I was there from 2020-2022
I was a rider on the Antietam for Westpac in 96-97. I am doubting it was the same guy but there was a screw up in Engineering Dept that could not stay out of Restriction and Extra Duty. Last night in Melbourne Australia, he went total Navy Seal by jumping off the fantail, missed the pier, and ended up in the water. Quarterdeck heard the splash and watched him climb up bumpers and onto the pier, then took off running for freedom. OOD put it in the log and told the CDO. He stumbled back to the ship before we got underway half drunk and probably thought it was worth it. A few days later at his mast, Capt. Doud told him "we have two weeks left till San Diego. If you make all of your musters and do not get in anymore trouble, I will drive you to the front gate myself the day we get to San Diego. If you miss a muster or do something to get written up again, the duty driver will take you to the gate once your restriction is over." I got off the ship in Pearl, so I don't know if he pulled it off or not but my magic 8 ball says he took the long way to the gate.
For those who do not understand what this is, it's a mini-trial.
The CO of a ship is the law at sea.
The CO can take money from your pay, restrict you to the shop for up to 45 days and give you 45 days of extra work
Within the UCMJ this is allowed!
During the 1970s I served in the Royal Navy. My first and last defaulters, (as we called it) march in, in front of Captain, Divisional Officer, Master At Arms and one or two other officers. Off caps not to the satisfaction of the MAA, get shouted at to do it again and properly this time. "Awarded" 14 days number 9 (extra work), 30 days number 10 (stoppage of leave) and several days loss of pay. So for the next 14 days I start work 06:30 and finish 20:30 on top of sea watches and normal day work. When that was finished the stoppage of leave kicked in, muster 06:30, 12:30, 16:30 and 21:00. From then on any time I was in front of the captain it was as a requestman, - promotion, good conduct badges and so on. That short sharp shock I got when I was 17 years old and been in the RN for 1 year sorted me out!
As someone who has served in the Navy for approximately 0 days. I have no idea whats going on here..
but someone farted at 3:19
😂
It’s all pretty much that, just not as funny.
I heard it also. 😂
He intentionally broke his TLD (radiation detector), lied about it. Threw away his working clothes to hide evidence. Threatened a Chief (an NCO). So, they brought him in front of the Captain for breaking (multiple) military rules for a non-judicial trial. He intentionally cut up his uniform before the trial and they made him wear it anyway.
You are a man of excellence.
I believe this guy got off easy and the officers maintained professionalism. I hope this young sailor appreciates the chance and lack of punishment.
With his attitude, he learned absolutely nothing. He's a disgrace to the uniform and the vow he took to uphold the Constitution
He was back on the streets of Detroit slinging rock within months... not surprised, I saw too many like him in my 5 years. The rules don't apply to them, everyone is racist, and if they get caught for something, it would be different if they were white. 🤦♂️
Yeah it’s cause he’s black. They get off easy and don’t do shit.
Boy, things sure have changed since I retired (1995). This disgrace for a Sailor should have been evaluated for mental illness. Since he was not mentally ill there is no way in hell I would have let him show up to CO's Mast ina uniform that he deliberately defaced. As Command Master Chief or in this case COB, I would have had him in dungarees. I certainly would not have allowed him to disrespect the CO and the proceedings the way he did. This sailor was a danger to the boat and the crew and I would have had him removed as soon as possible and put into the brig until such time that the cruise was completed and hold the CO's Mast on shore station at that time.
Article 15 isn't appropriate for this one... Summary or Special Court and a bad conduct DC
Excellent command decision!✅
Yes...but his/her pronouns take precedence....
As a former Army Medic, I find your realization of him needing a mental eval. but also calling him a disgrace confusing. If he is suffering a mental health crisis, which is common on deployments, he needs treatment, not ridicule and/or punishment (within reason). There is a reason medics give you guys Ice packs and Motrin and return you to duty. You are all a bunch of Drama Queens that can't read a room or a situation any better than Biden or Trump!
rumor has it he left there and is now commander of the pacific fleet, NO BOO SHIT
For the people who are shocked there are people like that in the military: I served 10-years in the military-4 in the Navy and then 6 in the Army. 💩bags in the military are not uncommon. Criminals in the military are not uncommon. And that is coming from someone who served in Signals Intelligence (Joint Service Operations) with a Top Secret SCI clearance. Not everyone in the military is there to serve honorably and not everyone in the military wants to be there at all. Just one example, I was working in a SCIF when a bomb threat was called into the facility where I worked. Authorities quickly figured out it was a sailor that worked in that facility. He was a sailor that often failed to perform his duties, would fall asleep while at work. After he called in the bomb threat I never saw him again.
How did this dude make it through sub school?
Quotas..
Same thing happened with female pilots in the eighties. I saw it!
He didn't. No one seems to be paying attention (ohhhh the irony). He's referred to as 'Recruit', indicating hes still in training. This is undoubtedly an onboard training assignment in port. Hes trying to get a FTA(Failure To Adapt) discharge.
@@springbloom5940 he wouldn’t be there if he hadn’t made it through sub school
@@jodygriffin3492
Wrong
I am an African American Navy Veteran. I am ashamed by this supposed "sailor". I hate to say it, but as a crew we would have solved this problem. Anybody that is this much of a problem would be handled by the crew, his best option would have been to get the hell out the Navy.
I agree brother we had a couple of goof ups but this guy's pathetic. I saw a few guys get tuned up for being f ups.
Blanket Party.
Thank you for your service!
@@Certifried-uv7jh Thank you sir.
Soap in the towel and blanket party!
Hold on a second they are questioning why he had a screwdriver? Fuck I was in deck and carried two knives and a multitool.
From the sounds of it he was assigned to the galley
We carried buckknives , and marlinspikes B.M.'s
@@natestinson69 I still wore mine everyday even when I was cranking in the galley.
Yea I felt naked without my gerber.
The sailor facing Captain’s Mast places the operational capability of a United States warship at risk.