Category: Navy

  • From homeless to hero — and maybe the cover of Maxim magazine?

    Janae

    Janae Sergio spent her high school years on the streets of Los Angeles, in and out of homeless shelters and programs for at-risk youth.

    So, when the 36-year-old Navy veteran heard about a competition that donates money toward building homes for wounded warriors, she knew she wanted to take part.

    “I know what it’s like to not have a home, so that’s really important to me,” she told Military Times.

    Sergio, now an assistant business and financial manager for the U.S. Pacific Fleet, is vying for a spot on the cover of the international men’s magazine Maxim, a competition that comes with a $25,000 prize for the lucky winner — and the kind of platform that would give Sergio a voice to inspire young people living in similar circumstances.

    Rags to riches? She now is out of uniform, but still working for Uncle Sam’s U.S. Pacific Fleet. Read more about this remarkable young woman in the Military Times

    Should have mentioned- she’s happily married and the mother of two daughters. It’s OK to be appreciative, just show some respect, too. Here’s a link to Janae’s instagram account with some 41K followers.

  • Michael E. Stone – Phony SEAL

    Michael E. Stone – Phony SEAL

    Military Phony sent us their work on this Michael Edward Stone fella, who claims that he was a Navy SEAL with SEAL Team 3 in Vietnam.

    He seems to love to wear the SEAL Trident on his ball caps.

    His official military records tell a different story, however…

    Michael Stone retired from the US Navy as a Chief (E-7) vs. a Senior Chief (E-8).

    He was a second class diver but there is nothing in his records to support his claim of being a Navy SEAL.  There is no BUD/S or SEAL training listed.

    There are no medals or assignments that would support his claim of being in Vietnam, let alone his claim of being with SEAL Team 3.

    As a sidenote – Stone is qualified as a divemaster.

    I wonder how many people go on dives with him and listen to him speak of Vietnam and SEAL Team 3?

    Chief E-7 Stone had an honorable career that spanned several decades.  Anyone that has a record as he does should not feel the need to embellish.  Depth does not make the diver and embellishing does not make you a Navy SEAL.

  • Navy sailor struck by propeller

    e-2c hawkeye

    Last week, Mick brought us the sad news of a death onboard the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush, while conducting routine flight operations in the Atlantic ocean. The Navy has released the Sailor’s name and the cause of death.

    A sailor who died aboard an aircraft carrier in the Atlantic Ocean during routine flight operations on the flight deck was struck by the turning propeller of a plane, the U.S. Navy said.

    The Navy said in a statement on Wednesday that Airman Apprentice Joseph Naglak had just secured an E-2C Hawkeye radar plane to the flight deck.

    Naglak’s death occurred Monday aboard the USS George H.W. Bush in the Atlantic. The aircraft carrier was supposed to go to sea for training along with 30 other warships, and Hurricane Florence moved up the date a few days earlier.

    The Navy said the incident remained under investigation.

    The flight deck of an aircraft carrier has been described as one of the most dangerous places on earth. Fair winds and following seas, Airman Apprentice Naglak.

    The entire article may be viewed Here.

  • Jose Cotto – Fake Navy SEAL

    Jose Cotto – Fake Navy SEAL

    The folks at Military Phony sent us their work on this fellow – Jose Francisco Cotto – who claims he was a Navy SEAL.

    Jose’s Facebook profile oozes with the claims of Navy SEAL.

    So does his bling…

    Jose claims he was in the Navy from 1983 – 1998.

    Oddly, he claims he was in BUD/S class 173 in 1982 on the UDT SEAL Museum page.

    Unless ‘1982’ was a typo, this would have him being in BUD/S while he was still on Delayed Entry in 1982.

    The National Personnel Records Center shows an alternative version of Jose’s career.

    Cotto’s official military records show 1982 – 1985, slightly less than 3 years, vs. the 1983 – 1998 that he claimed.  He had a hospital stay and was discharged soon after.  Difficult to believe he was on TDRL for fourteen years – the limit is five years.

    In any case, Jose’s records DO NOT list any SEAL training (BUD/S) or show him as being attached to any SEAL Teams.  Jose served during a time when others wouldn’t.  As is all too often the case with people who embellish their service record it appears that his time in the military ended prematurely.

  • The inside story of how a US Navy pilot shot down a Syrian jet

    LCDR Tremel

    The Russian built SU-22, NATO code name “Fitter” didn’t fare very well against Navy Tomcats back in the day. They’ve continued with this tradition against Navy Hornets.

    Navy LCDR Michael “M.O.B.” Tremel was sipping his coffee at 20,000 feet, at a leisurely 700 Kts, doing his part supporting US, Kurds, and friendly Arabs fighting ISIS. Little did he know he was about to become the first American pilot to shoot down an enemy aircraft, in battle, in 20 years.

    Tremel had a hunch the day’s mission would be different than the others he had flown into the gut of war-ravaged Syria, dropping bombs to protect friendly forces in the fight against the Islamic State.

    “Defending guys on the ground is what I’ve done my whole career,” the F/A-18E Super Hornet pilot told Navy Times last week at the Tailhook Association’s annual convention, where he received the Distinguished Flying Cross for becoming the first American pilot to shoot down an enemy plane since 1999.

    Tremel didn’t want to talk too much about those troops on the ground, but according to his medal citation they included an Air Force Joint Terminal Attack Controller, or JTAC, who was calling in strikes for Syrian rebels fighting Islamic State militants in their Raqqa
    stronghold.

    The beauty of the day clashed not only with the fighting below but also the thorny international politics that animate what strategists contend is a proxy war in Syria.

    It pits Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad and his Hezbollah and Russian allies against a shifting array of insurgents backed by Gulf Arab states and Turkey, plus Kurdish militias largely supported by the United States.

    These days, the complicated battles on the ground are matched by a jumble of jets in the sky.

    “You have Russian aircraft, Turkish aircraft, Iraqis, the Syrian air force,” Tremel said.

    That’s not want Tremel saw outside his cockpit in 2014, three years into the Syrian civil war, when he joined one of the first U.S. sorties into the divided country to bomb Islamic State positions.

    The rules of engagement briefed to the “Golden Warriors” of Strike Fighter Squadron 87 stressed caution. Russian aviators appeared to reciprocate by flying “very professionally, and so did we,” Tremel said.

    Tremel and his wingman, Lt. Cmdr. Carl “JoJo” Krueger, began their day with a launch off the carrier George H.W. Bush in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.

    They swung south of Cyprus and then jetted over Turkey toward Syria.

    His radar soon picked up an unknown aircraft closing fast on the U.S.-allied Kurdish and Arab militias bannered as the Syrian Democratic Forces.

    It was a Syrian Su-22 Fitter. Tremel said he tried to prod the pilot to move south and away from the friendly forces he was shepherding below.

    “At any point in time, if this aircraft would head south and work its way out of the situation, it’d be fine with us,” Tremel said. “We could go back to executing (close-air support).”

    That didn’t happen.

    “He ended up rolling in, dropping ordnance, two bombs on those defended forces,” Tremel said.

    Tremel went for the Sidewinder missile.

    “It was really crazy, swinging that master arm for the first time in combat with an air-to-air missile selected,” he recalled.

    But it didn’t work.

    “Real time, I thought I might have been too close,” Tremel said. “I thought maybe I hit (the jet) but it didn’t fuse in time.”

    So Tremel turned to the AIM-120, an advanced medium-range missile.

    “That got the job done from about half a mile,” he said.

    His actions on that day in 2017 won him a Distinguished Flying Cross, and would secure his own place among Naval Aviation icons.
    The lucky SOB.
    *grin*

    To view the article in its entirety, click on the link provided.
    Navy Times

  • USS Constitution to mark 9/11 attacks

    uss constitution
    BOSTON — USS Constitution, known by her crew as “Old Ironsides” will commemorate the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks with canon fire and solemn music.

    Navy crews with USS Constitution on Tuesday will fire one-gun salutes to mark when airplanes crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City, the Pentagon near Washington, and a field in Somerset County, Pennsylvania.

    Taps will also be played at the times when the two World Trade Center towers and part of the Pentagon collapsed as well as when United Flight 93 crashed in Pennsylvania.

    The attacks killed nearly 3,000 lives and injured more than 6,000 others.

    The world’s oldest commissioned warship still afloat was launched in 1797 and earned its nickname “Old Ironsides” when the Navy frigate defeated the British frigate Guerrière in a furious engagement off the coast of Nova Scotia.

    Witnesses claimed that the British shot merely bounced off Constitution‘s sides, as if the ship were made of iron.

    Its current crew members are all active duty sailors.

    Navy Times Link

  • The US Navy’s ‘Fat Leonard’ Case Implodes

     

    With the close of the Navy’s first “Fat Leonard” court-martial trial, the defendant is going to the brig but he escaped the most serious charges and potentially jeopardized future federal fraud cases against a string of past and present sailors.

    https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2018/09/01/navys-fat-leonard-case-implodes/

    Cmdr. David Morales was found guilty of only two of the five charges he faced — conduct unbecoming an officer and failing to report foreign contacts on his security clearance renewal.

    “Someone stood up to Leonard Francis and he was found to be untruthful,” said Frank Spinner, a retired Air Force attorney who represented Morales during his court-martial trial. “There’s now a crack in the prosecution dike for the remaining defendants awaiting trial in San Diego.”

    According to this article from November 2017, 60 admirals were being scrutinized for involvement with Francis.  https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2017/11/06/more-than-60-admirals-being-looked-at-in-fat-leonard-probe-report-says/

    The Navy has 60 admirals? That sounds like an overload of brass to me. Modern times, I guess.

    So how much of what Fat Leonard said was simply to get out of being prosecuted further? Hmm…. Inquiring minds want to know. This is $35 million he overbilled the Navy. That’s your tax dollars and mine.  That could pay the cost of a lot of recruits being trained properly.

    And since the article indicates that the Thai SEAL team has prostitutes, were they on the Thai Navy’s payroll, or were they just TAD to Fat Leonard?

  • Drag Queen Sailor Finds Acceptance in the Navy

    Yeoman 3rd Class Joshua J. Kelley by day, drag queen by night.

    It looks like the Navy has came a long way from the time RM 3 Schindler was murdered for being gay. This incident lead to extensive media coverage and, ultimately, to the “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy.

    But, the Navy has changed drastically since then.

    Petty Officer Joshua J. Kelly joined the Navy, like his father, to get out of the local area in exchange for challenge and adventure. And, adventure he got.

    This includes doing drag queen performances in order to help improve moral. It appears that he’s positively received, from NBC news:

    When Kelley joined the Navy, just like his father had, he said he was hoping to get out of his small town and challenge himself. He said he was a bit nervous about meeting all the new people, and he knew not everyone would be as colorful and flamboyant as he is. He was pleased, however, when he found acceptance.

    “I have many LGBT friends here, and if you can stand at attention properly and speak with proper etiquette, that’s what it comes down to in the Navy,” he said. “No one tells me I’m too feminine. I’ve not once had a bad experience as a gay man in the military.”

    His twin brother is also a drag queen.