RT | Fort Hood WMD specialist missing amid string of mysterious deaths & disappearances around army base

The US Army has asked the public for help in finding a missing bio, chemical and nuclear specialist stationed at Fort Hood in Texas, the latest soldier to vanish after a spate of puzzling deaths and disappearances around the base.

The 23-year-old sergeant, Elder Fernandes, was reported missing earlier this week, last seen by his staff sergeant on Monday at a residence near the Fort Hood army base in Killeen, Texas, according to a local ABC affiliate. The military has now called on the public for any information they might have about the soldier, issuing an alert on social media on Friday.

“We are very concerned about the welfare of this soldier and first and foremost we want to ensure he is OK,” Christopher Grey, spokesperson for the Army’s Criminal Investigation Command (CID), said in a statement.

If someone out there has any information, regardless of how trivial you may think it is, we are asking you to contact us immediately.

Fernandes – a chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear specialist assigned to the Sustainment Brigade of the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood – was brought to a residence in Killeen by his staff sergeant on Monday, but “did not report for work the following day as scheduled,” the army said, noting that his only known vehicle remains at the base.

Prior to his disappearance, the sergeant filed an “abusive sexual contact report,” according to Lieutenant Colonel Chris Brautigam, a public affairs officer at the base. Brautigam said Fernandes was transferred to a different unit following the report, in part to ensure there were “no opportunities for reprisals,” though provided few other details.

A Massachusetts state representative, Liz Miranda (D), said Fernandes’ car was found with “all of his belongings” at the Fort Hood base, and that he had “recently signed a new lease and never picked up the keys to his apartment.” She added that the soldier’s mother had flown to Texas from his hometown in Brockton, Massachusetts to find her son.

Fernandes’ disappearance comes just weeks after military investigators identified the remains of Specialist Vanessa Guillen, 20, who went missing from Fort Hood in April. Her case triggered widespread calls from lawmakers for an independent probe into how the army handled the investigation amid allegations that the soldier was a victim of sexual harassment before her death, which authorities have deemed a murder.

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Grim body count at Fort Hood army base

Just 11 days after Guillen’s remains were discovered, Army Private Mejhor Morta was found “unresponsive” some 15 miles away from Fort Hood, dying of an unknown cause a short time later. After Guillen, he was the seventh soldier to die under mysterious circumstances near the base in 2020 alone, three from gunshot wounds. The skeletal remains of Private Gregory Morales, 24, were also discovered off-base in mid-June; foul play is suspected in his death, though little about the investigation has been made public.

Fort Hood was again thrust into the spotlight earlier this month after two soldiers stationed there, and another at a base in San Antonio, were arrested and charged in a child prostitution sting, in which the three men believed they were meeting with girls aged 15 or 16 in a town adjacent to Killeen. A similar sting operation in 2017 led to child prostitution charges for 13 Fort Hood soldiers, all active duty.

Also on rt.com

© U.S. Army / Reuters
13 Fort Hood soldiers arrested in prostitution sting

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What Is Geo-Poli-Cyber™?

MLi Group created the terms Poli-Cyber™ and Geo-Poli-Cyber™ (GPC™) in 2012 and 2013 based on the philosophy that if you cannot identify and name the threat, you cannot mitigate that threat.

Geo-Poli-Cyber™ attacks are political, ideological, terrorist, extremist, ‘religious’, and/or geo-politically motivated.

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