Military

What Happens When Officers Don’t Take Out The Trash: Navy SEAL Convicted Of Smuggling

I don’t know former SEAL Bickle, a Navy SEAL convicted of smuggling, and I will not opine about his reputation or service.  He may have got caught up in a series of bad decisions, who the hell knows.  I do know that no former SEAL teammates testified on his behalf and this is very telling in itself.

Often what happens in the SEAL Teams is that there is such immense pressure from the top to keep personnel numbers high (as can be anyway) that it’s difficult to shit-can guys (e.g. remove them from the community) that are known problem children.

I’ve experienced this twice in my career; sub par performers recommended for fleet (regular Navy) launch and no support from above. These guys end up burning in (parachute that doesn’t open…”he burned in…”) like Bickle or worse, they get someone killed or kill a teammate, as was the case recently with an Army Special Forces problem child who killed a good man.

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I don’t know former SEAL Bickle, a Navy SEAL convicted of smuggling, and I will not opine about his reputation or service.  He may have got caught up in a series of bad decisions, who the hell knows.  I do know that no former SEAL teammates testified on his behalf and this is very telling in itself.

Often what happens in the SEAL Teams is that there is such immense pressure from the top to keep personnel numbers high (as can be anyway) that it’s difficult to shit-can guys (e.g. remove them from the community) that are known problem children.

I’ve experienced this twice in my career; sub par performers recommended for fleet (regular Navy) launch and no support from above. These guys end up burning in (parachute that doesn’t open…”he burned in…”) like Bickle or worse, they get someone killed or kill a teammate, as was the case recently with an Army Special Forces problem child who killed a good man.

“It’s a leadership problem, fix them”, senior leadership often says.  Not trusting your senior NCO’s to make the call is a HUGE mistake in these matters. These are your operational experts and can spot a dud a mile away. Usually they are the first to give guys one or two chances if they fuck up, and if they are finally recommending that a SEAL’s Trident be pulled then you’d best listen. Don’t and you may find that all our good work will go down the drain with tabloid headlines and you’re down a man anyways.

A wise Vietnam era SEAL once told me this when I was a new guy at SEAL Team 3,  “you can’t make ice cream out of shit”.

Words to live by.

Not a good day for the community and hopefully all senior leadership will learn from lessons like these and listen up next time a senior NCO makes a recommendation to pull a qual.

(AP) LAS VEGAS

A former U.S. Navy SEAL was sentenced Tuesday to 17.5 years in prison after prosecutors said he led a scheme to sell machine guns, explosives and military hardware smuggled into the U.S. from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Nicholas Bickle, who was cast by his lawyer as a wayward war hero who gave his mental and physical health for his country, made a brief plea for leniency before U.S. District Judge Roger Hunt imposed the sentence.

“I just hope and pray the court affords me an opportunity to start over and be a productive member of society,” Bickle said, wearing mustard yellow inmate garb with the word “detainee” on his back and shackles on his ankles.

The judge noted that Bickle, 34, wore his Navy uniform during trial, but said he considered it a bid to impress the jury.

Hunt said while he commends Bickle for his military service, it didn’t justify committing crimes.

“He felt, as a Navy SEAL, that he was above the law,” the judge said.

A federal jury in Las Vegas found Bickle guilty in October of 13 federal conspiracy and arms trafficking charges. Bickle surrendered to federal authorities in December after returning home to San Diego and receiving an “other than honorable” military discharge that stripped him of retirement benefits, health care and military honors including the Bronze Star.

Officials say he served eight years in the Navy, including two deployments to Iraq.

Bickle’s lawyer, John Arrascada, suggested Tuesday that his client was so affected by post-traumatic stress that he couldn’t tell right from wrong. Arrascada said plans to appeal the conviction and sentence.

Arrascada, seeking a lenient sentence for Bickle, told the judge his client was “along for the ride and not a mastermind.”

Arrascada suggested that Bickle was swept up in a conspiracy involving two friends and an arms dealer in Las Vegas — the co-defendants who took plea deals and testified against him.

The judge wasn’t convinced. Hunt said evidence showed weapons were brought into the U.S. and sold “at his approval, at his direction and with payment to him.”

Hunt added, “This crime in the court’s view is very, very serious.” He said there was a “veritable armory” of more than 40 weapons entered into evidence during trial.

Prosecutors accused Bickle of controlling the sale of military hardware ranging from ammunition to night-vision goggles and high-tech rifle targeting scopes.

A sniper rifle, AK-47 assault rifles, M92 submachine guns, military-grade Ruger 9mm handguns and a wheeled footlocker with a false bottom were seized by undercover federal agents at Bickle’s San Diego apartment, a storage unit he leased in nearby El Cajon, Calif., and in Las Vegas.

Agents also found five pounds of military C-4 explosive at the Durango, Colo., home of Bickle’s friend Richard Paul.

“The weapons trafficked in this case were not your ordinary firearms,” U.S. Attorney Daniel Bogden in Las Vegas said in a statement. “They were fully-automatic machine guns that likely would have ended up in the hands of criminals.”

Read more at CBS News.

About Brandon Webb View All Posts

Brandon Webb, a former Navy SEAL sniper and Naval Special Warfare Sniper Course Manager, is renowned for training some of America's legendary snipers. He is a multiple New York Times Bestselling Author, Entrepreneur, and Speaker. Webb is the Editor-in-Chief of the SOFREP news team, a collective of military journalists.

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