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Friday, April 30, 2021

Governor DeWine visits Great Seal State Park to honor victims and survivors of COVID-19 - Chillicothe Gazette

Navy SEAL teams plagued by “lawlessness” within their ranks - Sand Hills Express

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▶ Watch Video: “We need help”: Current and former Navy SEALs say fame has undercut their mission

Both former and active-duty Navy SEALs are sounding the alarm over well-documented cases of criminality, drug use and exploitation of the elite military unit’s brand, just as they prepare to mark 10 years since a SEAL team killed Osama bin Laden in a daring raid in Pakistan.

CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge spoke with more than a dozen people in the SEAL community, including current and former SEALs,  on the condition of anonymity. They told her that while the vast majority of their fellow SEALs serve honorably, there is a corrupt element in their brotherhood.

“We love the job. We love the community. But it has taken a wrong turn,” one SEAL told Herridge.

Three of them agreed to sit down with CBS News for interviews on the condition that their voices be changed and their identities hidden.  

Days after September 11, 2001, standing at Ground Zero in New York, President George W. Bush launched a massive global manhunt for the chief culprit behind the terror attacks. A decade later, the search ended at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where SEAL Team 6 had zeroed in on Osama bin Laden

Herridge asked the three SEALs who spoke to CBS News why they’d insisted on hiding their identities.

“We are risking a lot to be here, risking careers, possible safety,” replied one of the men. The group claims there are bad SEALs who have outsized influence on the teams.

“There are three groups in the teams. There’s a small group on one side that is evil. They’re lawless. There’s a small group on the other side that stands up to them,” the second SEAL said. “And then there’s a giant group in the middle that cowardly stays out of it, and they watch the evil guys railroad the good guys.”

Two SEALs recently pleaded guilty to the strangulation of Green Beret Logan Melgar in West Africa. His death in 2017 has been described as a hazing incident gone wrong, but one of the SEALs who spoke to CBS News said they didn’t believe that explanation.

“This didn’t just happen suddenly,” a second one added. “There were a hundred steps leading up to that. Lawlessness, narcissism, thinking they’re untouchable.”

There is also the controversial case of Edward Gallagher, who was accused of killing a teenage ISIS prisoner in 2017. During Gallagher’s war crime trial Special Operator 1st Class Corey Scott, a SEAL team medic, said that he, not Gallagher, had killed the teenager by asphyxiation.

President Trump publicly sided with the SEAL, defending him in November 2019: “They wanted to take his pin away, and I said, ‘no, you’re not going to take it away. He was a great fighter.'”

In the end, Gallagher was convicted of a lesser charge for posing with the dead prisoner’s body.

Drug abuse has been a problem, too. Around 2016, senior SEAL commander Jamie Sands read the East Coast teams the riot act.

“How do you decide that it’s ok to do drugs?” Sands asked the elite forces.

But two years later, after the dressing down by Sands, a heavily redacted Navy investigation obtained by CBS News showed that six members of SEAL Team 10 had tested positive for cocaine.

Two of the SEALs who spoke to CBS News said they had firsthand knowledge of deployments where members of the teams were taking drugs. The 2018 investigation into Seal Team 10 highlighted SEALs who admitted to using cocaine during sniper school, training and on deployment.

The SEALs said the drug use went beyond cocaine to include “methamphetamine, ecstasy and marijuana.” Some SEALs called drug testing a “joke.”

“I would say the majority of guys are not doing it. We’ve got to work hard to find the guys who are and how they’re getting it around,” one of the SEALs who sat down for an on-camera interview told CBS News.

Allegations of drinking and sexual assault got a SEAL platoon pulled from Iraq in July 2019. That same week, a memo from SEAL leadership read: “We have a problem.”

“Our lack of order and discipline comes from weak leadership and — and not enforcing the standards,” one of the SEALs told Herridge.

According to multiple members of the elite military unit, speaking up can have consequences. They showed photos of a fellow SEAL who they said was physically beaten by several teammates for calling out bad behavior.

“His leadership turned a blind eye to it, didn’t act on it, and essentially gave permission to the SEALs that he accused to deal with it on their terms,” the SEAL told CBS News, agreeing with Herridge’s description of the incident as “street justice.”

“For the SEALs watching this, the one thing I want them to think about is, where’s the line for you?” one of the troops told her. “If we can’t all agree that wrong things are wrong, then it’s just gonna keep going on.”

The acting Navy Secretary and the current SEAL commander declined on-camera interviews with CBS News.

In a statement, Rear Admiral Hugh Howard III, who heads up the Naval Special Warfare Command, told CBS News that the “Special Warfare team is quietly proud of our contributions to the joint force — our brothers and sisters — who make possible the incredibly complex missions the Nation asks of us. We strive to be an authentic and timeless team — a highly reliable team humble in triumph and fully accountable in failure. We serve all Americans with humility — a humility sharpened through combat losses, mission failures, and imperfection; a humility that drives our sense of urgency to learn, to evolve, and to come back stronger and even more resolute in defense of the United States of America. Our commitment is to be stewards of the incredible trust the American people place in us.”

The killing of Osama Bin Laden on May 1, 2011, was celebrated in the streets. The operation by SEAL Team Six brought a kind of celebrity that was at odds with the tradition SEALs being a “quiet professionals.”

“They should never have said, ‘Navy SEALS did this,'” retired SEAL Eric Deming said. With nearly two decades as a SEAL, Deming did tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, and said that the Navy SEALs became a “brand,” to their detriment.

“I hate being in this chair talking to you [CBS News] right now. I don’t know if this is gonna help. But at least it’ll expose the problem,” Deming said. “And I’m hoping this encourages good SEALs to start saying: ‘Enough is enough.'”

Herridge asked the group who sat down for interviews with CBS News whether they believed the SEAL community would be in a better place today had it never been revealed that their teammates fellow SEALs took out bin Laden.

Two of them said yes, and one added that as soon as it was made public, he had wondered, “how long are we gonna go before somebody exploits this for personal gain? And we didn’t have to wait long.”

Hollywood told the story of the raid in the film “Zero Dark Thirty,” and CBS has aired four seasons of its own prime-time series, “Seal Team.” Online, former SEALs have monetized their newfound fame, including with autographed photos for sale online.

As Herridge showed the three SEALs she sat down with signed photos she’d purchased, one of them started shaking his head, and said he didn’t want to touch it.

“It’s not ok. What about the ‘quiet professional’ does that encompass? None of it,” the SEAL said.

Members of SEAL Team Six were disciplined for serving as paid consultants to a video game company. When Herridge asked what the problem was with that, one of the troops answered: “[It was] exposing tactics, techniques, procedures. They expose all kinds of things of how we operate.”

Another was punished for writing an unauthorized account of the raid.

“It’s not everybody doing it. Most guys in the SEAL Teams want the books to stop. They want the movies to stop. The TV shows to stop,” one of the SEALs said.

Asked why the elite troops shouldn’t make some money off their service when it’s finished, one of the SEALs said: “‘Cause this isn’t going to Harvard to get a business degree. You serve to uphold the Constitution of the United States and to protect our country. The military and our operations, they’re not for sale.”

When asked why they came to the media, one of the SEALs said there was “desperation: To put it in three words: ‘We need help.’ And that’s why we’re here.”

Herridge asked retired SEAL Deming what it would take to fix the problem.

“It’s gonna take good guys in the teams staying there, fighting the good fight, calling them out. And then some outside entity coming in and doing a full review of everything,” he said. “It’s gotta come from outside, and there’s gotta be somebody that’s got some integrity.”

Deming who filed a complaint about training practices, still carries the trident from his days as a SEAL.  He said he’d shattered his own son’s dreams by telling him he wouldn’t allow him to join the SEALs — at least not until he sees real change.

What comes next could be even more significant: In January, the Pentagon inspector general has undertaken an evaluation into potential war crimes and whether U.S. Special Operations Command and U.S. CENTCOM are doing enough to prevent potential war crimes, and reporting them if they do happen on the battlefield

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D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine offers to seal arrest records of over 200 BLM protesters - CBS News

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District of Columbia Attorney General Karl Racine is offering to seal the arrest records of more than 200 protesters accused of violating curfew in D.C. during last summer's protests over the murder of George Floyd. 

Racine has been sending letters to individuals who are eligible for relief, notifying them that his office won't prosecute them and will request a judge seal their arrest record if they respond. Sealing the record would allow individuals who were arrested to keep the records from view by the general public. 

Hundreds of protesters were arrested in D.C. in June for violating curfew, after D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser ordered a citywide curfew effective May 31. Anyone outdoors for nonessential reasons could be arrested for curfew violation. While most of the protests were peaceful — there were incidents of looting, destruction of property and some police officers were injured.

"One hundred fifty law enforcement officers were injured, and many taken to the hospital for concussions," Attorney General Bill Barr said of the District protests in an interview with CBS News "Face the Nation" host Margaret Brennan in June. 

Only five individuals who were arrested for curfew violations were formally charged. Those whose prosecutions were dropped without conviction are eligible to have their arrest records sealed if they don't have disqualifying prior arrests or convictions, according to D.C. law. About 80 individuals arrested for curfew violations during the June protests are not eligible to have their records sealed, according to the D.C. attorney general's office.

"We declined to prosecute the vast majority of protesters who were arrested in early June 2020 for violating the Mayor's curfew order while peacefully protesting in the District," OAG communications director Abbie McDonough said in a statement. "When making charging decisions, OAG evaluates the evidence and circumstances surrounding each individual arrest as well as the public safety risks to the residents of the District. OAG is also proactively offering to file motions on behalf of eligible individuals and ask a judge to seal their arrest records to help make the process easier for those individuals and reduce hurdles to have their arrest records sealed." 

The killing of George Floyd while he was in police custody sparked protests in cities across the nation. Earlier this month, former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted on all charges related to Floyd's murder. 

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Navy SEALs tell CBS News "lawless" members plague teams with criminality, drug abuse and profiteering - CBS News

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Both former and active-duty Navy SEALs are sounding the alarm over well-documented cases of criminality, drug use and exploitation of the elite military unit's brand, just as they prepare to mark 10 years since a SEAL team killed Osama bin Laden in a daring raid in Pakistan.

CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge spoke with more than a dozen people in the SEAL community, including current and former SEALs,  on the condition of anonymity. They told her that while the vast majority of their fellow SEALs serve honorably, there is a corrupt element in their brotherhood.

"We love the job. We love the community. But it has taken a wrong turn," one SEAL told Herridge.

Three of them agreed to sit down with CBS News for interviews on the condition that their voices be changed and their identities hidden.  

Days after September 11, 2001, standing at Ground Zero in New York, President George W. Bush launched a massive global manhunt for the chief culprit behind the terror attacks. A decade later, the search ended at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where SEAL Team 6 had zeroed in on Osama bin Laden

Herridge asked the three SEALs who spoke to CBS News why they'd insisted on hiding their identities.

"We are risking a lot to be here, risking careers, possible safety," replied one of the men. The group claims there are bad SEALs who have outsized influence on the teams.

"There are three groups in the teams. There's a small group on one side that is evil. They're lawless. There's a small group on the other side that stands up to them," the second SEAL said. "And then there's a giant group in the middle that cowardly stays out of it, and they watch the evil guys railroad the good guys."

Two SEALs recently pleaded guilty to the strangulation of Green Beret Logan Melgar in West Africa. His death in 2017 has been described as a hazing incident gone wrong, but one of the SEALs who spoke to CBS News said they didn't believe that explanation.

"This didn't just happen suddenly," a second one added. "There were a hundred steps leading up to that. Lawlessness, narcissism, thinking they're untouchable."

There is also the controversial case of Edward Gallagher, who was accused of killing a teenage ISIS prisoner in 2017. During Gallagher's war crime trial Special Operator 1st Class Corey Scott, a SEAL team medic, said that he, not Gallagher, had killed the teenager by asphyxiation.

President Trump publicly sided with the SEAL, defending him in November 2019: "They wanted to take his pin away, and I said, 'no, you're not going to take it away. He was a great fighter.'"

In the end, Gallagher was convicted of a lesser charge for posing with the dead prisoner's body.

Drug abuse has been a problem, too. Around 2016, senior SEAL commander Jamie Sands read the East Coast teams the riot act.

"How do you decide that it's ok to do drugs?" Sands asked the elite forces.

But two years later, after the dressing down by Sands, a heavily redacted Navy investigation obtained by CBS News showed that six members of SEAL Team 10 had tested positive for cocaine.

Two of the SEALs who spoke to CBS News said they had firsthand knowledge of deployments where members of the teams were taking drugs. The 2018 investigation into Seal Team 10 highlighted SEALs who admitted to using cocaine during sniper school, training and on deployment.

The SEALs said the drug use went beyond cocaine to include "methamphetamine, ecstasy and marijuana." Some SEALs called drug testing a "joke."

"I would say the majority of guys are not doing it. We've got to work hard to find the guys who are and how they're getting it around," one of the SEALs who sat down for an on-camera interview told CBS News.

Allegations of drinking and sexual assault got a SEAL platoon pulled from Iraq in July 2019. That same week, a memo from SEAL leadership read: "We have a problem."

"Our lack of order and discipline comes from weak leadership and — and not enforcing the standards," one of the SEALs told Herridge.

According to multiple members of the elite military unit, speaking up can have consequences. They showed photos of a fellow SEAL who they said was physically beaten by several teammates for calling out bad behavior.

"His leadership turned a blind eye to it, didn't act on it, and essentially gave permission to the SEALs that he accused to deal with it on their terms," the SEAL told CBS News, agreeing with Herridge's description of the incident as "street justice."

"For the SEALs watching this, the one thing I want them to think about is, where's the line for you?" one of the troops told her. "If we can't all agree that wrong things are wrong, then it's just gonna keep going on."

The acting Navy Secretary and the current SEAL commander declined on-camera interviews with CBS News.

In a statement, Rear Admiral Hugh Howard III, who heads up the Naval Special Warfare Command, told CBS News that the "Special Warfare team is quietly proud of our contributions to the joint force — our brothers and sisters — who make possible the incredibly complex missions the Nation asks of us. We strive to be an authentic and timeless team — a highly reliable team humble in triumph and fully accountable in failure. We serve all Americans with humility — a humility sharpened through combat losses, mission failures, and imperfection; a humility that drives our sense of urgency to learn, to evolve, and to come back stronger and even more resolute in defense of the United States of America. Our commitment is to be stewards of the incredible trust the American people place in us."

The killing of Osama Bin Laden on May 1, 2011, was celebrated in the streets. The operation by SEAL Team Six brought a kind of celebrity that was at odds with the tradition SEALs being a "quiet professionals."

"They should never have said, 'Navy SEALS did this,'" retired SEAL Eric Deming said. With nearly two decades as a SEAL, Deming did tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, and said that the Navy SEALs became a "brand," to their detriment.

"I hate being in this chair talking to you [CBS News] right now. I don't know if this is gonna help. But at least it'll expose the problem," Deming said. "And I'm hoping this encourages good SEALs to start saying: 'Enough is enough.'"

Herridge asked the group who sat down for interviews with CBS News whether they believed the SEAL community would be in a better place today had it never been revealed that their teammates fellow SEALs took out bin Laden.

Two of them said yes, and one added that as soon as it was made public, he had wondered, "how long are we gonna go before somebody exploits this for personal gain? And we didn't have to wait long."

Hollywood told the story of the raid in the film "Zero Dark Thirty," and CBS has aired four seasons of its own prime-time series, "Seal Team." Online, former SEALs have monetized their newfound fame, including with autographed photos for sale online.

As Herridge showed the three SEALs she sat down with signed photos she'd purchased, one of them started shaking his head, and said he didn't want to touch it.

"It's not ok. What about the 'quiet professional' does that encompass? None of it," the SEAL said.

Members of SEAL Team Six were disciplined for serving as paid consultants to a video game company. When Herridge asked what the problem was with that, one of the troops answered: "[It was] exposing tactics, techniques, procedures. They expose all kinds of things of how we operate."

Another was punished for writing an unauthorized account of the raid.

"It's not everybody doing it. Most guys in the SEAL Teams want the books to stop. They want the movies to stop. The TV shows to stop," one of the SEALs said.

Asked why the elite troops shouldn't make some money off their service when it's finished, one of the SEALs said: "'Cause this isn't going to Harvard to get a business degree. You serve to uphold the Constitution of the United States and to protect our country. The military and our operations, they're not for sale."

When asked why they came to the media, one of the SEALs said there was "desperation: To put it in three words: 'We need help.' And that's why we're here."

Herridge asked retired SEAL Deming what it would take to fix the problem.

"It's gonna take good guys in the teams staying there, fighting the good fight, calling them out. And then some outside entity coming in and doing a full review of everything," he said. "It's gotta come from outside, and there's gotta be somebody that's got some integrity."

Deming who filed a complaint about training practices, still carries the trident from his days as a SEAL.  He said he'd shattered his own son's dreams by telling him he wouldn't allow him to join the SEALs — at least not until he sees real change.

What comes next could be even more significant: In January, the Pentagon inspector general has undertaken an evaluation into potential war crimes and whether U.S. Special Operations Command and U.S. CENTCOM are doing enough to prevent potential war crimes, and reporting them if they do happen on the battlefield

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Servicing Wheel Bearing Seals - Tire Review

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Wheel bearings have to operate under both vacuum and pressure. As a bearing heats up due to friction or braking action, pressure builds up inside the hub. As the bearing cools down, vacuum or negative pressure is created. Pressure has to be managed so the grease stays in under pressure and contaminants stay out under vacuum. 

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If the bearing seal creates too much friction, it can hurt fuel economy by increasing rolling resistance. To reduce friction, many seal manufacturers are using new materials and lip designs to seal the bearing.

As a rule, wheel bearing seals should never leak. Any signs of a current leak or previous leaks are an indication that the seal has failed.

Materials

Some newer seals are fabricated using specialty compounds and proprietary materials. The materials can remain flexible under a wide variety of conditions and won’t be degraded by the grease inside the hub for many miles. The materials are also designed to withstand countless heat cycles. 

Some might wonder if the color of the materials makes a difference in the quality of the seal. This is difficult to answer because many suppliers use pigments to dye the material.

Designs

Most seals today are termed “lip seals,” as they have a lip that rides against the outside diameter of a shaft. This “rubber” (nitrile, polyacrylate, silicone, etc.) lip is bonded to a metal shell that fits into the bore of the component to be sealed. A garter spring fits in a groove behind the lip to help it maintain contact with the shaft. Sometimes, there will be a bead of sealer around the outside diameter of the metal shell to help seal it to the bore.

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For some seals, the metal shell is completely covered with the same material from which the lip itself is made. Some lip seals include their own integral dust seal, which is a small, additional lip facing the outside of the shell. This small lip has no garter spring. Some bearing seal manufacturers are making seals that can have up to three different lips.

Installation

A seal must always be installed so that the sealing lip is facing the fluid to be sealed. Why? The lip is made so that pressure applied to it from the “wet” side of the seal will increase the pressure it applies to the shaft. If the seal is installed backward, pressure acting on the “wrong” side of the lip will cause it to lift from the shaft, resulting in leakage. On most seals, the correct side is obvious; on others it is not.

Most seals are designed so that the “back” (side that faces the fluid) of the shell is open. The front is closed and may have a part number embossed on it. However, some seal shells are very symmetrical, and careful attention must be paid to the correct direction of the lip.

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Some seals are even designed for a specific rotation. They may have an arrow on them to show the rotation. Directional seals may have small diagonal ridges near the lip. The ridges act as miniature “screw threads” to help divert fluid away from the lip as the shaft turns. Some seals are engineered with a sinewave in the lip that resonates a pattern as the shaft turns. This helps squeeze the lip, push pump oil away from it and reduce leakage.

Once the seal is out, check the surfaces of the hub and spindle where the lip rides for damage. If the surface is scored, pitted or otherwise too rough for the new seal, you have several options. Minor scratches or corrosion can often be removed with emery cloth. Nothing coarser than emery cloth should be used to dress up the surface. Sometimes, the lip of a hardened old seal will wear a groove into the sealing surface. If you can catch a fingernail in the groove after polishing the shaft with emery cloth, the groove is too deep and unacceptable. Replacement of the hub or spindle, whatever it is, could be very expensive, both in terms of the cost of the hub and the labor to replace it.

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Check the seal itself to determine the cause of failure. If the seal is hard and/or worn, it’s simply a victim of age. If the lip of the seal is extremely soft and swollen, it may be a victim of non-compatible lubricants.

If the seal is relatively new, it may have been incorrectly installed. Installation failures include signs of torn lips, dents from improper installation tools, misalignment, cocked installation, burr damage and a missing garter spring. Careless installation can cause the garter spring to dislodge from its groove. Be sure to also check for signs of heat damage.

Next, make sure you have the correct seal. Check the fit on the shaft and in the housing. Before installing the seal, lubricate the lip with whatever fluid it’s going to work in. If the seal is installed dry, the lip will overheat as soon as the shaft starts turning.

Use a seal installer to tap the new seal in place. If the seal must be installed over a rough part of a shaft (such as splines) to position it where it belongs, wrap masking tape around the rough areas to prevent seal damage. Don’t hammer directly on the seal, and never use a punch or drift to install the seal. Denting of the seal’s shell by the punch can distort the lip and cause the seal to leak. Be sure to start the seal in the bore squarely and also drive it in squarely. Generally, the seal should be tapped in until it is flush. There are some exceptions, so it’s a good idea to check the depth before the old seal is removed.

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Texas pushes closer to dropping handgun license requirement - WSAZ-TV

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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — In Texas, where gun laws are among the loosest in the U.S., there is one line the state has long resisted crossing: making it legal to carry a handgun in public without a permit, background check or training.

Governors didn’t champion it. Police persuaded Republican leaders to avoid it. And two years ago, when a frustrated gun rights activist showed up outside the home of the Texas House speaker, the resulting outcry quickly snuffed it out again.

But in a span of just weeks, Texas has suddenly pushed ever closer to becoming the largest state in the country with unregulated or “permitless” carry — a move that is alarming law enforcement and has some Republicans staring down a vote they’d rather avoid. It has also disheartened lawmakers from El Paso, which is still recovering from one of the worst mass shootings in the nation’s history, when a gunman at Walmart killed 23 people in 2019.

“What is going on out there that we need to overhaul a system that works?” asked Kevin Lawrence, executive director of the Texas Municipal Police Association, which opposes the bill. “We are fine with law-abiding citizens having guns. But there are still some people who should not be allowed to carry guns in public.”

On Thursday, a special committee hastily created by the state Senate was set to advance the measure — an unusual move because it comes just weeks after Republicans said they didn’t have the votes. And a week after ducking a question on the bill, Republican Gov. Greg Abbot said this week that he would sign it.

The measure would eliminate the license requirement and the state background check and training that go with it. It wouldn’t prevent businesses from banning guns on their property, and federal background checks for some gun purchases would remain in place. Supporters of the bill say it would allow Texans to better defend themselves in public while abolishing unnecessary hurdles to the Constitutional right to carry a gun.

Emblematic of the pressure the governor has been under from some Republicans, state party Chairman Allen West, a firebrand former congressman from Florida who took over the Texas GOP’s leadership in 2020, chided Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick as “squishies” for their initial hesitance on the gun issue.

“You’d think they’d be proud to whip the Legislature and get it done,” West said.

Texas has more than 1.6 million handgun license holders under a law first passed in 1995. The state doesn’t require a license to carry long guns in public, and eliminating the license for handguns has long been a goal of hardcore gun activists. After years of being mostly ignored, they seized on a change of leadership in the Texas House to press forward.

The House’s new speaker, Republican Dan Phelan, sponsored a permitless carry bill several years ago. With him in charge now, the issue sailed through the Republican-dominated chamber this month.

“We cannot allow another session to come and go where we pay lip service to the Second Amendment while failing to fully restore the God-given rights to our citizens,” state Sen. Charles Schwertner said Thursday. “We simply can’t allow this opportunity to pass us by. This issue is far to important.”

Gyl Switzer, executive director of the gun control group Texas Gun Sense, which opposes the bill, said she grew worried when the issue got a full vote in the House. Republican lawmakers who avoided the vote in the past likely didn’t want to look soft on gun issues ahead of the 2022 elections, she said.

“It’s literally a life or death bill,” Switzer said. “I would like to believe that people could step away from some oath to the right wing of their party.”

Texas would join about 20 states that allow some form of unlicensed handgun carry, but it would be by far the biggest in terms of population. Tennessee earlier this year dropped its handgun license requirement and several others are considering it.

“It’s in the air,” Switzer said. “There is even national pressure. I’m sure Texas (Republicans) don’t want to look weak.”

The change would still only allow people age 21 or over to carry handguns. And people with violent crime convictions or some other legal prohibition would still be barred from carrying them. But there would be no way to weed them out without the early background check.

Law enforcement groups warn eliminating the license requirement will make the streets more dangerous. Figuring out who can legally carry and who can’t shouldn’t be left a patrol officer, Lawrence said.

“I fear for our law enforcement,” said Sen. Eddie Lucio, a Democrat. “I would hate to see more guns out there that cause more injury or death.”

A handful of Democrats support the bill, but others are frustrated that the state isn’t strengthening its gun restrictions in light of its mass shootings in recent years, most notably at the El Paso Walmart, a Houston-area high school and a church in Sutherland Springs.

When the bill passed the House, state Rep. Joe Moody, who district includes El Paso, said lawmakers had “done nothing at all to make good on solemn promises made to the families of El Paso and in places across the state on the graves of their loved ones.”

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Thursday, April 29, 2021

VA Bankruptcy Court Grants Debtors’ Motion to Seal Hearing - The National Law Review

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On April 19, 2021, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia granted a motion (the “Seal Motion”) filed by the Intelsat S.A. debtors (the “Debtors”) to seal the hearing on the Debtors’ motion to extend exclusivity and motion to compel plan mediation.  Although bankruptcy courts routinely grant motions to seal content included in pleadings, it is uncommon for a court to prevent certain parties, or the general public, from attending a hearing.  This article reviews the Debtors’ unusual request.

The Facts

Confidentiality has been of the utmost importance to the Debtors since their chapter 11 bankruptcy cases were filed on May 13, 2020.  In order to ensure that confidential information would not be jeopardized during plan negotiations and related discovery, the Debtors and key constituents entered into a confidentiality agreement in September 2020.  Subsequently, in December 2020 the Debtors negotiated and received court approval on a protective order guarding against the disclosure of confidential information.

Following these protective measures, the Debtors entered into a plan support agreement with certain creditors and filed a proposed plan of reorganization on February 12, 2021.  However, not all creditors consented to the proposed plan – of note, certain creditor groups holding several tranches of the Debtors’ prepetition notes formally objected to the proposed plan.  The Debtors engaged in negotiations with these creditor groups, and the Debtors were forced to file a motion to extend exclusivity and a motion to compel plan mediation when plan negotiations stalled.

Objections to both the motion to extend exclusivity and the motion to compel plan mediation were filed, and the Debtors filed their Seal Motion in which they argued that they needed to include sensitive, non-public information in their reply briefs and requested (a) that replies filed in support of the motions be sealed, and (b) that the hearing on the motions should be sealed.  In other words, only key creditors and parties in interest would be permitted to listen to the hearing on Zoom.

Legal Justification

Pursuant to section 107(b)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code, courts may protect entities from potential harm that might result from the disclosure of certain confidential information, specifically “trade secret[s] or confidential research, development, or commercial information.”  Courts have held that protection may be necessary if the movant proves that one of these confidential information categories needs to be protected.

Section 107(b)(1) confidentiality protection is often based upon the equitable powers granted pursuant to section 105(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, which gives courts the power to “issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title.”  In addition, Bankruptcy Rule 9018 sets forth procedures for a party to protect its confidential information by providing that “the court may make any order which justice requires … to protect the estate or any entity in respect of a trade secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial information.”

The UST Objection

The Office of the United States Trustee (the “UST”) objected to the Debtors’ request to seal the entirety of the hearing related to the exclusivity and plan mediation motions (importantly, not the Debtors’ request to redact its replies) on two grounds.  First, the UST asserted that there is a general presumption that court hearings should be public.  This commonsense argument focused on the Debtors’ willingness to seek relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in a court where court filings are typically open and available to the public.  Second, the UST suggested that sealing the entire hearing would likely be unnecessary and that the Court should therefore instead only seal those portions of the hearing that involved confidential information.

The Court’s Holding Granting the Motion to Seal

The Court overruled the UST’s objections and granted the Debtors’ request to seal the hearing to the extent confidential information would be discussed.  In granting the Seal Motion, the Court noted that it would be cumbersome and time-consuming to flip the hearing from public to private, and vice versa, on the electronic Zoom platform.  And, although the hearing was sealed, the Court instructed the Debtors and the other parties that were permitted to attend to submit a redacted transcript of the hearing as soon as possible.  Furthermore, during the second day of the hearing, the Court opened up a portion of the hearing to the general public once confidential information was no longer at risk of being disclosed.  Ultimately, the Court granted the Debtors’ motion to extend exclusivity and motion to compel plan mediation.

Takeaways

Filing a motion to seal a pleading or a portion of a pleading is relatively common practice in bankruptcy proceedings.  However, prohibiting all parties from simply attending a court hearing is a bit unusual.  Nevertheless, the Intelsat case, as well as the earlier decision in In re Health Diagnostic Laboratory, Inc., No. 15-32919 (KRH) (Bankr. E.D. Va. Mar. 24, 2021), demonstrate that such relief is achievable.

Nonetheless, given the public access concerns raised by the UST, counsel and their clients should understand that such relief may be the outlier.  Indeed, counsel is wise to educate their clients who are contemplating filing for bankruptcy that such filings will make many of the company’s, and their directors’ and officers’, dealings public knowledge.

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© Copyright 2021 Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLPNational Law Review, Volume XI, Number 119

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Honest Company Stock: Why You Should Avoid It After the IPO - Money Morning

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Honest Company stock almost went public before. Ironically, a lack of honesty put it on hold.

The Honest Company, founded by actress Jessica Alba, billed itself as "clean and sustainable," and then it was found not to be so.

Five years later, it will trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol "HNST."

The company said on April 26 (Monday) that it would shoot for an IPO valuation of $1.5 billion, offering over 25 million shares in the range of $14 and $17.

But is Honest stock more of a buy today than it was then?

Things are always more than they appear. You'll want to know if this company has cleaned up its act in the last five years or still plans to rely on a celebrity face to sell its product.

Let's find out if The Honest Company is as honest as it says yet…

What Is The Honest Company?

Actress Jessica Alba founded Honest Co. after the birth of her first baby in 2008. It vowed to use natural, organic, or "clean" products instead of the artificial chemical-infused junk lining most shelves.

In addition to baby food, Honest sells consumer goods like lotions and detergents. The company plans to expand internationally, so a capital infusion from something like an IPO is useful to that end.

Founded by actress Jessica Alba, The Honest Company operates in the market for "ethical" consumer goods.

The company leans on four "pillars" in making its products: clean, sustainable, effective, and thoughtfully designed.

As a result, the company excludes as many as 2,500 commonly used chemicals from its ingredients. The ingredients it uses are said to be "sustainably sourced" or recycled.

The effort is about more than just "clean" ingredients, too. Honest also aims for "carbon-neutral" deliveries to offset greenhouse gas emissions.

Currently, its business is in the United States and Canada, with its eyes set on the Asian market in the future.

There is a big trend toward natural, sustainable products in the market, which drives investing in companies prioritizing environmental, social, and governance (ESG) needs.

Eighty-four percent of Americans say they buy organic foods "sometimes." U.S. retail sales of organic produce have gone from around $35 billion in 2013 to $45 billion in 2020.

Ten billion dollars in less than 10 years is no too shabby. Makes you think an ESG stock is the thing to be these days.

But watch out…

Problems Being Honest

The Honest Company already wanted to go public in 2016. Right then, it was hit with a lawsuit over misleading advertising.

Some of Honest's products contained an ingredient that it had sworn not to use. Specifically, detergents, cleaners, and soaps were marketed as not containing sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) when they in fact did.

In fact, The Wall Street Journal published tests citing "significant amounts" of the chemical.

The company fought the charges on a technicality, saying that the chemical found was a slightly different, less-irritating, safer chemical. They used "sodium coco sulfate" (SCS), not SLS.

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That, however, was also proven misleading from a chemistry perspective by the WSJ, since the "safer" SCS was said to always contain SLS, though they are not one and the same.

Well, good news: They fixed it in a $7.3 million settlement.

This, occurring in 2017, put off the Honest IPO plans around the same time. Now, the company will attempt to go public again.

If the Honest Co. stock price is $17 at IPO, that's about $110 million in revenue for the company.

Honest hopes to use the money for more marketing and expanding its product line.

Now, if you're not clear on whether Honest Company stock is a buy, read here…

Should You Buy Honest Stock?

The Honest Co. already had a couple brushes with dishonesty. So, the brand could still struggle to carry out its intended vision.

It also participates in an extremely competitive industry. Consumer goods includes some of the biggest companies on the planet, like Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) and Nestle (OTCMKTS: NSRGY).

Even in the "clean" and "ethical" consumer goods space, it has some fierce competition, like Ecover, Dyper, and FirstCry.

It's a great pool of competitors, many of them with significantly more capital than Honest Co.

So, there are significant competitive moats to overcome, especially with giants like Estee Lauder and Loreal selling products in the same categories. We're talking years of product development and adoption.

It would honestly be a miracle if The Honest Company wins in this market. Even if it did not have a shady lawsuit five years ago, there would be concerns.

But past management questions leave little doubt that Honest Company is a stock to avoid.

IPOs in general can be risky, as the prices are inflated initially due to massive institutional buying. High IPO prices often crash when the hype is over.

This is likely to happen with Honest Co., if it gets any hype at all.

The Honest IPO date is yet to be announced. But if you're only attracted to the glitz and glam of celebrity and sustainability buzzwords, now would be a great time to break that spell.

The Digital Gold Rush of the 21st Century

Our resident Silicon Valley insider is recommending three under-the-radar digital coins as today's BEST crypto buys.

They're much smaller and more affordable than Bitcoin, with up to 10X the growth potential as Dogecoin in the coming years.

One is trading for around $12, and predictions suggest that by the end of this year, the price could sit at $88.56 – a 638% profit.

To learn about all three – and discover how even a small stake could transform into a small fortune in 2021 – click here.

Follow Money Morning onFacebook and Twitter.

Join the conversation. Click here to jump to comments…

About the Author

Mike Stenger, Associate Editor for Money Morning at Money Map Press, graduated from the Perdue School of Business at Salisbury University. He has combined his degree in Economics with an interest in emerging technologies by finding where tech and finance overlap. Today, he studies the cybersecurity sector, AI, streaming, and the Cloud.

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Oatey’s Drain Seal Provides Added Protection for Buildings - Multi-Housing News

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Oatey Drain Seal. Image courtesy of Oatey

Oatey has introduced its Drain Seal system, designed for basements, utility rooms, laundry rooms, building gyms and other areas in buildings with drains that aren’t regularly used, as well as drains that require everyday usage.

The drainage solution prevents water in the P-trap from evaporating, which can cause the drain to lose its seal.

The Oatey Drain Seal features a one-way valve that prevents sewer gases, odors and insects from entering your building.

The product’s design eliminates pooling around the drain and protects your building from any harmful elements that can enter, without restricting water flow.

The Drain Seal can be easily installed without any tools and is available in two styles that accommodate 2- or 3-inch pipes.

The product can be fitted in most general-purpose floor and shower drains without impacting performance.

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Adorable Baby Elephant Seal Rescued After Falling into Manhole - Newsweek

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A group of concerned citizens and first responders worked quickly to miraculously save an adorable four-flippered baby that trapped itself in a manhole.

An elephant seal pup reportedly fell down into a storm drainage system in Washington on Wednesday evening. Fortunately, the adorable creature was rescued by emergency personnel and some compassionate animal lovers.

College student Alex Hunter told Komo News that the rescue operation started while he and his parents were having dinner. His grandfather Dave Anderson called Hunter in a hurry, saying that the poor seal was stuck and he needed help — as well as a "big net."

"My grandpa was a vet for many years and is known as a great problem solver around the island, so that's why he was called," Hunter told the outlet. "His buddy had called him and needed him down at Mutiny Bay because there was a baby elephant seal stuck in a manhole."

Hunter, Anderson and several other worried bystanders did everything they could to ease the animal out from the manhole before the South Whidbey Fire/EMS team and Langley police officials arrived. Hunter also claimed a practicing marine biologist veterinarian was on standby on the phone.

"The lock was cut and the grates opened, and a ladder lowered in, in hopes that he could rest against that while it was determined how best to get him out," Deputy Chief Terry Neh told KCPQ.

"South Whidbey Fire was able to bring a cargo net to the scene, which was lowered with ropes and maneuvered underneath [the seal]."

Elephant Seal Saved
An elephant seal pup was saved by good samaritans who found the baby in a storm drain. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Hunter added in a report to Komo News that the team "tried our best to distract the seal while we got the net under him" to not frighten him further.

After "about three attempts of trying to hoist him up," Hunter and the fire department were successfully able to free him.

The Fire/EMS team informed KCPQ that the curious seal, who has since been named Elwood, likely got stuck in the drainage system because the pipe connects to the bay he calls home. Although it was not immediately clear how long Elwood was stuck, a spokesperson estimated he had been in there "for hours."

Once Elwood was successfully freed from the drain, responders returned him to the beach. Because the pipes connect to the Mutiny Bay with about four feet of water that Elwood had to tread until his rescue, the South Whidbey Fire/EMS team gave the exhausted pup a lift home.

"It was a very stressful situation at first," Hunter told Komo News. "But once I saw how many people came out to help the little guy, I knew he was going to be alright."

Elwood isn't the only lucky pup rescued from a near drowning. Early last week, a dog was caught on tape rescuing a puppy struggling to stay afloat in a swimming pool.

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NBA roundup: Suns seal 1st playoff berth since 2010 - Reuters

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The Phoenix Suns clinched their first playoff berth since the 2009-10 season with a 109-101 win over the visiting Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday.

Chris Paul scored 15 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter, and he also had 10 assists. Phoenix is now two games ahead of the Clippers for second place in the Western Conference. The Utah Jazz lead the conference standings by a game over the Suns.

Phoenix's Devin Booker added 21 points and six rebounds. Paul George had 25 points and 10 rebounds for Los Angeles, and Marcus Morris Sr. added 16 points.

76ers 127, Hawks 83

Seth Curry scored 20 points in three quarters and host Philadelphia had little trouble dispatching Atlanta.

Joel Embiid and Tobias Harris added 17 points and seven rebounds each as the Sixers clinched a playoff spot. Shake Milton and Furkan Korkmaz contributed 12 apiece and Tyrese Maxey had 11 for Philadelphia.

The short-handed Hawks played without a number of key players such as Trae Young (left ankle), Cam Reddish (right Achilles) and De'Andre Hunter (right knee). John Collins led the Hawks with 21 points while Solomon Hill added 14.

Jazz 154, Kings 105

Bojan Bogdanovic scored 24 points and Jordan Clarkson added 23 to lead Utah to a dominating victory over host Sacramento as the Jazz set a franchise record for most points in a game.

Georges Niang chipped in 19 points while Rudy Gobert added 12 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks for the Jazz. Eight players scored in double figures to help Utah snap a two-game losing streak.

Richaun Holmes and Buddy Hield scored 18 points apiece to lead the Kings. Justin James added 16 points. Sacramento could not keep pace after allowing the Jazz to shoot 64 percent from the field and make 24 of 41 (58.5 percent) of their 3-point attempts.

Nuggets 114, Pelicans 112

Nikola Jokic had 32 points and delivered a key block on Zion Williamson in the final seconds to help host Denver hold on to beat New Orleans.

Facundo Campazzo had a career-high 19 points along with 10 assists, and Michael Porter Jr. scored 28 for Denver.

Pelicans guard Lonzo Ball had 16 points, 12 assists and 12 rebounds for his first triple-double of the season. Brandon Ingram scored 27 points while Williamson added 21.

Wizards 116, Lakers 107

Russell Westbrook had a triple-double, Bradley Beal scored 27 points and Washington beat visiting Los Angeles.

Westbrook finished with 18 points, 18 rebounds and 14 assists for his 30th triple-double of the season. Alex Len had 18 points and nine rebounds for Washington, which has won 11 of 13 and currently holds the final play-in spot in the Eastern Conference.

Anthony Davis led the Lakers with 26 points. Andre Drummond had 17 points and 11 rebounds for Los Angeles, which has lost four of five.

Heat 116, Spurs 111

Jimmy Butler scored a game-high 29 points and host Miami used a 17-0 second-half run to rally past San Antonio.

Bam Adebayo added 21 points and a game-high 11 rebounds for the Heat. Heat coach Erik Spoelstra earned career win No. 600. Only four other active coaches have more victories than Spoelstra.

San Antonio's Dejounte Murray posted his fourth triple-double of the season with 22 points, a game-high 11 assists and 10 rebounds. He scored 11 points in the fourth quarter, but the Spurs -- who entered the game with the NBA's second-best road record at 18-10 -- couldn't stop Miami.

Celtics 120, Hornets 111

Jaylen Brown's 38 points and Jayson Tatum's 35 propelled Boston to a bounce-back victory against visiting Charlotte.

The Celtics snapped a three-game losing streak that included a home loss a night earlier to struggling Oklahoma City. They also avenged Sunday's lopsided 21-point setback at Charlotte. The Celtics, who posted a 54-33 rebounding advantage, played again without Kemba Walker (oblique).

The Hornets lost their second game in as many nights despite 25 points from Devonte' Graham. Terry Rozier had an off night for Charlotte, posting nine of his 15 points in the fourth quarter. He was 4-for-18 overall from the floor, including 1-for-8 on 3-point attempts against his former team.

Trail Blazers 130, Grizzlies 109

CJ McCollum recorded 26 points and six assists to help Portland roll over host Memphis.

Norman Powell added 24 points and Damian Lillard scored 23 as the Trail Blazers defeated Memphis for the first time in three meetings this season. The Grizzlies won in Portland last Friday and Sunday.

Jonas Valanciunas scored 19 points and Dillon Brooks added 18 for Memphis, which dropped its second straight game. Ja Morant shot just 3-for-11 while posting 10 points and eight assists for the Grizzlies.

Knicks 113, Bulls 94

Julius Randle scored 34 points as host New York pulled away in a dominating fourth quarter in a blowout victory over Chicago.

Randle shot 12 of 23 from the field and posted his 12th 30-point game of the season for the Knicks, who outscored Chicago 37-19 in the final quarter. New York won for the 10th time in 11 games and moved one game ahead of fifth-place Atlanta in the Eastern Conference.

Nikola Vucevic totaled 26 points and 18 rebounds for the Bulls, who fell two games behind the 10th-place Washington Wizards for the final play-in spot. The Bulls dropped to 4-5 this season without Zach LaVine (health and safety protocols).

Magic 109, Cavaliers 104

Cole Anthony's driving layup and two free throws in the last minute allowed Orlando to survive a huge rally by host Cleveland.

Anthony finished with 18 points as Orlando snapped a six-game losing streak and won for just the second time in 14 games. Gary Harris paced the Magic with 19, while Chuma Okeke scored 18 before leaving the game in the fourth quarter with an ankle injury.

Cleveland erased a 21-point deficit in the fourth quarter, tying the score at 104 when Kevin Love drained a 3-pointer with 1:03 left before fading in the final minute. Darius Garland posted a game-high 25 points and 10 assists to pace Cleveland, while Jarrett Allen chipped in 17 points and a game-high 13 rebounds.

--Field Level Media

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Navy SEALs to shift from counterterrorism to global threats - ConchoValleyHomepage.com

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Wednesday, April 28, 2021

WATCH: Baby elephant seal rescued from manhole on Whidbey Island - KOMO News

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WATCH: Baby elephant seal rescued from manhole on Whidbey Island  KOMO News

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Seal Beach Man Loses $140,000 in Lottery Scam, Police Seek Information - NBC Southern California

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Scams

Seal Beach Man Loses $140,000 in Lottery Scam, Police Seek Information

The man sent money to the fraudsters using the United States Postal Service, Nicholas said. However, the scammers demanded additional payment from the man to "secure the lottery winnings."

Authorities on Wednesday sought information about a lottery scam that defrauded a Seal Beach man out of about $140,000.

Seal Beach Police Department officers responded Friday to a call of theft by false pretenses, said the department's Lt. Nick Nicholas.

The man who made the call told officers he received a letter in 2020 postmarked from Portugal which claimed that he had won the lottery in Spain, Nicholas said.

The letter, which contained logos and images similar to those used by the California Lottery, claimed the man had to pay "upfront tax money" to claim his winnings.

The man sent money using the United States Postal Service, Nicholas said. However, the scammers demanded additional payment from the man to "secure the lottery winnings."

The man sent cashier's checks to multiple individuals in the United States and Portugal over the course of several months. He discovered he was the victim of a scam after he sent about $140,000 and received nothing in return.

The Seal Beach Police Department, in cooperation with the FBI and international officials, is investigating the scam in an attempt to identify the criminals.

Anyone with information of the incident can contact Seal Beach Police Department Detective Jon Ainley at 562-799-4100, ext. 1113 or jainley@sealbeachca.gov.

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SEaL trap shooters kick off 2021 season with a fast start - Ashland Daily Press

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Navy SEALs to shift from counterterrorism to global threats - NBC News

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WASHINGTON — Ten years after they found and killed Osama bin Laden, U.S. Navy SEALs are undergoing a major transition to improve leadership and expand their commando capabilities to better battle threats from global powers like China and Russia.

The new plan cuts the number of SEAL platoons by as much as 30% and increases their size to make the teams more lethal and able to counter sophisticated maritime and undersea adversaries. And there will be a new, intensive screening process for the Navy’s elite warriors, to get higher-quality leaders after scandals that rocked the force and involved charges of murder, sexual assault and drug use.

Rear Adm. H. Wyman Howard III, top commander for the SEALs, laid out his plans in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press. He said the Navy’s special operations forces have been focused on counterterrorism operations but now must begin to evolve beyond those missions. For the past two decades, many have been fighting in the deserts of Iraq and mountains of Afghanistan. Now they are focused on going back to sea.

Oct. 27, 201901:25

That decision reflects the broader Pentagon strategy to prioritize China and Russia, which are rapidly growing their militaries and trying to expand their influence around the globe. U.S. defense leaders believe that two decades of war against militants and extremists have drained resources, causing America to lose ground against Moscow and Beijing.

The counterterrorism fight had its benefits, allowing the SEALs to sharpen their skills in developing intelligence networks and finding and hitting targets, said Howard, who heads Naval Special Warfare Command, which includes the SEALs and the special warfare combatant-craft crewmen. “Many of these things are transferable, but now we need to put pressure on ourselves to operate against peer threats.”

As a result, Howard is adding personnel to the SEAL platoons to beef up capabilities in cyber and electronic warfare and unmanned systems, honing their skills to collect intelligence and deceive and defeat the enemy.

“We are putting pressure on ourselves to evolve and understand our gaps in capability and what our true survivability is against these threats” posed by global competitors, he said.

Adm. Mike Gilday, the chief of naval operations, said the goal is to better integrate the SEALs into the Navy’s missions at sea.

“As the Navy Special Warfare community returns more and more to its maritime roots, their increased integration across the Fleet — above, under, and on the sea — will unequivocally enhance our unique maritime capabilities to help us compete and win against any adversary,” Gilday said in a statement to the AP.

Increasing the size of the SEAL platoons will add high-tech capabilities. And decreasing the number of units will allow Howard to rid the force of toxic leaders and be more selective in choosing commanders. That decision is a direct result of the erosion in character that Navy officials have seen within the force.

In recent years, SEALs have been involved in a number of high-profile scandals. One of the most well-known was the arrest of Navy Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher on war crimes charges that included murder of an Islamic State militant captive and attempted murder in the shootings of civilians during a 2017 deployment to Iraq.

Gallagher was acquitted of all charges except one, posing in photos with the dead captive. A jury recommended his rank be reduced, cutting his pension and benefits as he was about to retire. But President Donald Trump intervened and ordered that Gallagher be allowed to retire without losing his SEAL status.

More recently, a SEAL team platoon was pulled out of Iraq in 2019 amid allegations of sexual assault. Members of SEAL Team 10 were involved in cocaine use and tampering with drug tests. And Navy SEAL Adam Matthews was sentenced to a year in military prison for his role in the 2017 hazing-related death of an Army Green Beret in Africa.

Navy leaders also chafed as Navy SEALs broke away from their “quiet professional” ethos, publicizing their participation in the raid into Pakistan that killed bin Laden, the al-Qaida leader responsible for plotting the 9/11 attacks. Two SEALs wrote books about the mission, prompting a rebuke form the Naval Special Warfare commander at the time, Rear Adm. Brian Losey.

“A critical tenant of our ethos is ‘I do not advertise the nature of my work, nor seek recognition for my actions,’” he said.

Since taking over last September, Howard reached out to the Army and the Marine Corps for ideas on how to better screen his commando forces and assess them as they move through the ranks. Almost immediately, he instituted a “double blind” process for candidate interviews that was being used by the Army, so that neither side is influenced by actually seeing the other.

In addition, he is intensifying the screening process with more psychological assessments to evaluate personality traits. And he is expanding other assessments done by the subordinates and peers of candidates up for review. The increased scrutiny, said Howard, will extend through all the ranks and will help leaders get a better understanding of each service member’s character. The process, he said, will provide more feedback for individuals so they can improve and will also help top leaders pair commanders with the right teams.

In some cases, Howard said, sailors who already had gone through the initial SEAL screening had to do it again under the new process. Not all did as well the second time.

“We learned that some of the officers that scored in the midrange are officers that I thought would have scored much higher,” he said.

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