Wednesday, May 11, 2005



Intruder on the Truman



British and U.S. authorities are investigating how an intruder from West Africa managed to sneak aboard the Norfolk-based aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman in England last month.

A man was discovered on the carrier on April 9 during a port visit to Portsmouth, England, according to Lt. Mike Kafka, 2nd Fleet spokesman in Norfolk. A search of the ship and the surrounding area turned up nothing suspicious. The visitor was unwelcome nevertheless.

"The Ministry of Defense was contacted and asked to remove the individual from the ship," Kafka said.

The man had made his way onto the Royal Navy's Portsmouth Naval Base and onto a boat ferrying sailors back to the Truman from shore leave.

"They were anchored off so they were using the liberty boats to get back and forth," Kafka said.

The man was initially held under a British anti-terrorist act after spending as long as two hours aboard the Truman, according to media there, but was later turned over to local police...

Carrier gets unwelcome visitor (Daily Press, Hampton Roads VA)

It sounds like this happened during the evening just as sailors were coming back from liberty, which is the perfect opportunity for someone trying to sneak aboard, expecially with the large number of people attached to an aircraft carrier.   It is even more understandable when you read further on that the guy has a history of getting into supposedly secure areas.

Nevertheless, it is quite an emberassment as he had managed to slip past base security and then the ship's watch, both of which are supposed to be checking IDs.





Military comment []12:42:40 PM   trackback [] 


Pecuiliar stories from Maine



I went to the Portland Press-Herald page in search for base closure news and found these two stories as the top ones.

More brain suits filed

The legal battle over brain harvesting in Maine continued to expand Tuesday when four more families filed lawsuits alleging their dead relatives' brains were taken without proper authorization.



The cases, all brought by Berman & Simmons of Lewiston, raise the number of brain-harvesting lawsuits in Maine to eight. The Lewiston law firm is expected to file a ninth case today in Kennebec County Superior Court...

This apparently has been a running story for awhile now. The newspaper's Brain harvesting in Maine page has stories going back to October of 2004.

By bus or it's a bust

SANFORD — Take those Betsey Johnson and Jessica McClintock dresses, scrunch them up and pile onto the bus - Sanford High School is headed to the prom. A bus to the prom? That doesn't sit well with parents who think they should be allowed to drive their children to and from the event. One mother is seeking a court order that would permit her to drive her 18-year-old son.



Marylou Mitchell of Sanford, who opposes a new policy that states students must either book a limousine or ride to the event in one of six coach buses provided by the school, said she filed her request Monday afternoon in Springvale District Court...

What puzzles me is that there is no mention of students being upset over not being able to drive themselves. Perhaps they have never had that opportunity or it was taking away so long ago that it's not an issue. Strange stuff.

And yes, I did find something base closure related: Base Closings Blog (Maine Today).




Jackpotzrebie comment []12:16:22 PM   trackback [] 


Base closure list to be released on Friday



State braces for release of base closure list (Fort Myers News-Press)

Camp Blanding's star may rise with base closings (Florida Times-Union)

As the articles hint, things are looking good for Florida. The state certainly isn't facing anything like 1995 when NAS Cecil Field (Jacksonville) and and Recruit Training Center (Navy boot camp) Orlando were put on the chopping block.

My father and I have a couple of predictions. One is that NAS Brunswick (Maine) will be closed with its squadrons transferred to NAS Jacksonville. The other is that NS Kings Bay (Georgia) will be closed with its subs and associated commands transferred to Norfolk.

For details on the base closing process check out the DOD's Base Realignment and Closure 2005 page.

Military comment []12:05:29 PM   trackback []