Navy SEAL Trainee’s Drowning Death Ruled a ‘Homicide’

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A Navy SEAL trainee drowned after being repeatedly “dunked” underwater by an instructor, according to a San Diego medical examiner’s report released Wednesday that labels the death a homicide.

“Although the manner of death could be considered by some as an accident, especially given that the decedent was in a rigorous training program that was meant to simulate an ‘adverse’ environment, it is our opinion that the actions, and inactions, of the instructors and other individuals involved were excessive and directly contributed to the death, and the manner of death is best classified as homicide,” the pathologist wrote.

The May 6 death of Seaman James Derek Lovelace, 21, had not been announced by the Navy until after officials were questioned about it days later by NBC News and The Virginian-Pilot newspaper. Navy officials portrayed it as a training mishap. But sources told NBC News and The Pilot the death was caused by an instructor going too far.

Lovelace was struggling during an exercise in which trainees tread water in the pool wearing combat fatigues and boots, according to the medical examiner’s report. Multiple witnesses told investigators that prior to the instructor laying his hands on Lovelace, the sailor’s “face was purple and his lips were blue.”

During the exercise, “instructors are reportedly advised to not dunk or pull students underwater,” the report says.

But in a video of the incident, the report says, “an instructor in the water approaches the decedent and apparently dunks the decedent underwater. Over the course of the next approximately five minutes, the instructor follows the decedent around the pool, continually splashing him with water. The decedent is also splashed by other instructors in the water. Throughout the time period, the decedent is observed to go under the water multiple times.”

At one point, the report says, another student approached Lovelace and tried to help him keep his head above the surface. One individual considered calling a “time-out” to stop the exercise, the report says, but failed to do so.

“The instructor appears to again dunk the decedent and continues to follow him around the water,” the report says. “The instructor also appears to pull the decedent partially up and out of the water and then push him back. Eventually, the decedent is assisted to the side of the pool where he is pulled from the water.”

Lovelace was initially responsive but later died, the medical examiner’s report says.

He was in the first week of Basic Underwater Demolition/SEALs training, or BUD/S. The six-month course is considered among the most punishing military training programs in the world, with four out of five trainees failing to complete the program and become SEALs.

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SOURCE: NBC News, Ken Dilanian, Mike Hixenbaugh and Jim Miklaszewski