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Page 6 - நிக்கோல் ஸ்ச்சுவெகுமான் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Black Sailor Finds Noose Hanging From His Bed on Warship, Investigation Launched

Black Sailor Finds Noose Hanging From His Bed on Warship, Investigation Launched Newsweek 3/02/2021 Rebecca Speare-Cole © Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Z.A./U.S. Navy photo USS Lake Champlain (CG 57), center, leads the Republic of Korea destroyers Sejong the Great (DDG 991), left, and Yang Manchun (DDH 973) while transiting the Western Pacific. The U.S. Navy has reportedly launched an investigation after a Black sailor found a noose hanging on his bed aboard a warship. The sailor found the noose on his rack on the guided-missile cruiser USS Lake Champlain on January 26 last week, according to the San Diego Tribune. The publication cited a navy official saying that a sailor based in San Diego has been removed from the ship and is facing an investigation after admitting to the Navy Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) that he had left the noose there as a joke.

Navy Working on Better Maintainability, Self-Sufficiency for LCS and Rest of Surface Fleet

Home » Budget Industry » Navy Working on Better Maintainability, Self-Sufficiency for LCS and Rest of Surface Fleet Navy Working on Better Maintainability, Self-Sufficiency for LCS and Rest of Surface Fleet January 20, 2021 5:06 PM The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) training ships JS Kashima (TV 3508), left, and JS Shimayuki (TV 3513), right, sail alongside the Independence-variant littoral combat ship USS Gabrielle Giffords (LCS-10) during an exercise, June 23, 2020. US Navy Photo Navy officials in Washington and on the waterfront are trying to help the Littoral Combat Ships grow more reliable and maintainable, amid a surface navy-wide effort to focus on crew-level maintenance as a means of improving operational availability.

Sailors with COVID-19 replaced aboard USS Essex

Sailors with COVID-19 replaced aboard USS Essex By (0) Some sailors aboard the USS Essex who contracted the COVID-19 pandemic were replaced by personnel from other ships, the Navy confirmed. Photo courtesy of U.S. Navy  Dec. 18 (UPI) Replacement U.S. Navy personnel were assigned to the USS Essex to fill in for an undisclosed number of crewmen ill with the COVID-19 pandemic, the Navy confirmed. The amphibious assault ship left San Diego in early December with a contingent of U.S. Marines for an exercise, and returned on Monday. An unidentified sailor of the USS Essex said in an interview that replacement sailors, many from the USS Bonhomie Richard, came aboard after their arrival by hovercraft.

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