Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Army boosting staff for criminal investigat­ions

- Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON – The Army has begun hiring more agents and support staff for its criminal investigat­ions, as the new civilian director works to correct widespread failures that surfaced last year after a string of murders and other crimes at Fort Hood, Texas.

Gregory Ford, who took over as head of the Army Criminal Investigat­ion Command, or CID, about a month ago, told reporters Wednesday that he visited Fort Hood last week. He said the hiring process for more than 90 positions has begun, and the Army is already getting a good response from individual­s interested in joining CID.

A review late last year found CID was understaffed and badly organized, with too few experience­d investigat­ors. The findings came amid heightened scrutiny after the death of Vanessa Guillén, a soldier whose remains were found about two months after she was killed.

More than two dozen Fort Hood soldiers died in 2020, including homicides and suicides. Guillén’s death and the other cases prompted an independen­t review, which found that CID investigat­ors lacked the acumen to identify key leads and “connect the dots” in investigat­ions. It said they were victims of a system that failed to train them and often had them doing administra­tive tasks. The Army earlier this year decided to put a civilian in charge of CID, which to date had been led by a general officer. The decision was in line with the review recommenda­tions in an effort to revamp the command.

Ford said he is moving ahead with Army plans to increase the number of civilian agents so they would make up about 60% of the investigat­ors, while military agents make up the remainder.

In addition, he said, “I’ve been taking a very hard look at our policy and the administra­tive burden we place on our workforce and have directed a further review to eliminate the duplicatio­n of effort and some of the unnecessar­y policy requiremen­ts that may exist.”

Fort Hood, Fort Bragg in North Carolina

and Fort Carson in Colorado are part of a pilot project that will see some of the early changes and staffing improvemen­ts. Ford said the Army has already given agents the opportunit­y to move to the three bases.

He said a key goal is to ensure timely and aggressive investigat­ions that are approached “with a sense of urgency” in the critical early hours after crimes are reported.

The level of interest in the job openings, he said, has “surpassed everybody’s expectatio­ns.” The posts are a strong draw for individual­s who may have been in the military and left to go into law enforcemen­t and are looking for a way to return to service, said Ford.

He did not give details on the cost of the changes, but said the Army has been providing what is necessary to begin the transforma­tion.

The decision to replace a military leader of CID with a civilian mirrors a similar shift by the Navy in 1992, in the aftermath of the Tailhook scandal, when Navy and Marine officers sexually assaulted dozens of women at a hotel in Las Vegas. As a result of sweeping condemnati­on of the Navy’s investigat­ion into the matter, leaders transforme­d the military-led Naval Investigat­ive Service into the Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service and appointed a civilian director.

 ?? MINDAUGAS KULBIS/AP, FILE ?? Fort Hood, Fort Bragg and Fort Carson are part of a pilot project that will see some of the early staffing improvemen­ts.
MINDAUGAS KULBIS/AP, FILE Fort Hood, Fort Bragg and Fort Carson are part of a pilot project that will see some of the early staffing improvemen­ts.

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