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Saturday, November 16, 2024

US Soldier caught smoking weed while overseeing Nuclear tipped missiles

The Minot Air Base is somewhat notorious for its record of embarrassing security lapses, however. In 2008, an investigation was launched after three ballistic missile crew members at the base were caught dozing off on the job.

An airman at a US Air Force base overseeing nuclear-tipped missiles and bombers was reportedly caught red-handed smoking a joint in a missile alert facility, prompting an investigation.

News about the incident spread like wildfire after it was first reported by the Air Force Forum Facebook page earlier this week.

The report claimed that the airman was “caught smoking marijuana in one of the MAFs (missile alert facilities),” at North Dakota’s Minot Air Force Base, and that investigators later found a “rolled joint” in one of the “interior couch cushions.”

Minot is home to one of the US’ two B-52 bomber bases and keeps watch over 150 Minuteman 3 nuclear missiles.

The post, published October 20, claimed that while the weed-loving airman was “removed from the field” and that an investigation had been launched, the commanders were trying hard to keep the potential security-compromising slip from becoming the talk of the town.

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Apparently, somebody spilled the beans online, forcing the base into full damage control mode after the story was picked up by several military publications. Air Force Spokesman Sgt. Benjamin Smith revealed Wednesday that the incident took place on October 9.

The base acknowledged that “illegal drugs,” namely an unspecified amount of marijuana, were recovered as a result of the search. However, the Air Force denied the initial report that the substance was found inside a MAF, saying there was “no indication that illegal drugs were found below ground or near any missile operator.”

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“Illegal drugs were found in the above-ground facilities of a Minot AFB Missile Alert Facility,” the base said in a statement, promising to give a more detailed account of the incident once a “thorough investigation,” now underway, is wrapped up.

“We take this matter seriously and will investigate this fully,” 2nd Lieutenant Gabriel M. Cushing, a spokesman for the base’s 5th Bomb Wing, told Task & Purpose. Whether the Air Force is trying to make the incident sound less alarming in terms of security, or whether the author of the FB post has mixed things up, is up for speculation.

News about the incident spread like wildfire after it was first reported by the Air Force Forum Facebook page earlier this week.

The Minot Air Base is somewhat notorious for its record of embarrassing security lapses, however. In 2008, an investigation was launched after three ballistic missile crew members at the base were caught dozing off on the job while in possession of classified launch code devices.

Last year, the Air Force offered a $5,000 reward for information to help locate and retrieve an armored box containing an MK19 machine gun and launcher rounds after it fell off a vehicle travelling from the base.

Minot is home to one of the US’ two B-52 bomber bases and keeps watch over 150 Minuteman 3 nuclear missiles.