US Navy Punishes Sailor Who
Hid on Ship for a Week Causing Massive Search



Petty Officer 3rd Class Peter Mims, US Navy

I saw this story on CNN's crawler 19 July 2017 and looked it up on their website. Below are two versions of the story: CNN's and one from Navy Times. The quotation "Spokesmen declined to say how exactly Mims was punished" was on CNN's crawler and elicited my interest; it reminded me of the naval punishment stories by "White Jacket" on this website. I think I know how I would punish the cocky little punk. He was "hiding", so I think it would be appropriate to let the punishment fit the crime by making "hidings" the center of his punishment. Specifically, 15 hidings with the prison strap, with 50 licks each, with one administered every other day during a stay of 30 days in the brig. Do you think Mims would learn his lesson? Email me with your own ideas and I'll post them here. 
 




CNN: US Navy punishes sailor who
hid on ship for abandoning watch

By Paul LeBlanc, CNN

Link to CNN document

Updated 12:38 PM ET, Wed July 19, 2017

(CNN)The US Navy has punished a sailor who was presumed to be lost at sea, prompting a massive search and rescue operation, but was later found hiding on board.

Petty Officer 3rd Class Peter Mims, a gas turbine systems technician on the USS Shiloh, was believed to have gone missing on June 8 while the Shiloh was conducting routine operations 180 miles east of Okinawa, Japan. His disappearance prompted a search involving both American and Japanese ships scouring 5,500 square miles of the Philippine Sea over a span of 50 hours.

Mims had, in fact, never left the ship and was eventually found by his shipmates hiding in an engineering space, officials said.

It's not clear why he hid or how long he was planning on hiding.

Mims disappeared before a naval proceeding known as an "Admiral's Mast," during which time he admitted his disappearance was intentional and said he took "steps to avoid being found by other Shiloh sailors who were actively attempting to locate him," Lt. Paul Newell, a spokesman for the Navy's 7th Fleet, told CNN.

After the confession, Mims received a nonjudicial punishment "due to the seriousness of the incident and the impact it had on the entire strike group and our Japanese allies," Newell said.

Newell declined to say how exactly Mims was punished, but said the Navy is considering additional administrative discipline.

Rear Adm. Charles Williams, commander of the carrier strike group that includes the USS Shiloh, called Mims' discovery in June a relief to the Navy community.

"I am relieved that this sailor's family will not be joining the ranks of Gold Star Families that have sacrificed so much for our country," he said.

Newell said Mims' actions violated the Uniform Code of Military Justice's Article 86, abandoning watch, and Article 92, dereliction in the performance of duties.

CNN's Ryan Browne and Zachary Cohen contributed to this report.





 
 
 
 
 



Navy Times: Punishment for 'missing' Shiloh sailor likely capped at 30 days in the brig

By: Mark Faram, July 18, 2017

Link to Navy Times document

The decision by top Navy officials not to seek a court-martial for Gas Turbine Systems Technician (Mechanical) Fireman Peter Mims severely restricted their options for disciplining the sailor who was initially thought to be lost at sea in June but was found a week later hiding in an engine room on board his ship.

In opting to take Mims to a secretive admiral's mast on July 13, Navy leaders likely limited Mims' maximum punishment to 30 days in the brig, half his pay for two months and an administrative discharge, according to Navy regulations.

Mims was presumed dead after going missing June 8 from the guided-missile cruiser Shiloh off the coast of Okinawa, Japan.

His misconduct resulted in a massive search-and-rescue effort that diverted the Ronald Reagan strike group for several days and also involved an array of U.S. Navy and Japanese ships and aircraft combing through more than 5,500 square miles of open water.

Navy officials have declined to say what punishment Mims received at the admiral's mast, where he faced charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice including abandoning watch under Article 86 and dereliction in the performance of duties under Article 92, a Navy spokesman said.

Mims admitted that his weeklong disappearance from the Shiloh was intentional and that "he took steps to try to avoid being found by the other Shiloh sailors who were actively trying to locate him," Navy Lt. Paul Newell, spokesman for Seventh Fleet, told Navy Times Tuesday.

According to the Navy Commander's Quick Reference Legal Handbook, or QUICKMAN, published by the Navy's Judge Advocate General's office, the maximum punishment a sailor can get at an Admiral's mast depends on the paygrade of the sailor.

Mim's official record, obtained by Navy Times, shows his rank as E-3 or "Fireman" because he serves in an engineering rating and that he'd been at that rank since Aug. 16, 2015.

Mims has been widely reported in the media as a third-class petty officer. And had been selected last fall to put on E-4, but most likely he never officially was advanced to that paygrade by the time he disappeared.

A Navy custom called "frocking" allows sailors to assume the rank, responsibility and privileges, but not the pay of the rank they've been selected to before their official date of rank rolls around and makes it permanent.

That means Mims most likely went to mast as an E-3 and thus the punishment he would be eligible for in a non-judicial punishment includes:

  • Reduction in rate one paygrade
  • Fine of half a month's pay for up to two months
  • Restriction for up to 60 days and possibly extra duty for up to 45 days
  • Correctional Custody for not more than 30 days.

The Navy also said that Mims could face further administrative action, that could come in the form of written or verbal reprimands or in the most extreme case, result in him being processed for administrative discharge.

Newell, the Navy spokesman. said "the decision to use admiral's mast was due to the serious impact this had on the [Ronald Reagan strike group] and also our Japanese allies."

Mims was put in the brig for pretrial confinement June 21 but released several days later and assigned to administrative duties in San Diego.

Legal experts initially told Navy Times that Mims could have faced a slate of UCMJ charges that could have resulted in a long sentence of confinement and that commanders would likely be consider a harsh punishment because of the resources drained by the 50-hour search-and-rescue effort.

 
 
 
 
 





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