Via: AP:
The No. 2 officer at the military command in charge of all U.S.
nuclear war-fighting forces is suspected in a case involving counterfeit
gambling chips at a western Iowa casino and has been suspended from his
duties, officials said.
Navy Vice Adm. Tim Giardina has not been arrested or charged, Iowa
Division of Criminal Investigation special agent David Dales said
Saturday. The state investigation is ongoing.
Giardina, deputy commander at U.S. Strategic Command, was suspended
on Sept. 3 and is under investigation by the Naval Criminal
Investigative Service, a Strategic Command spokeswoman said.
The highly unusual action against a high-ranking officer at Strategic
Command was made more than three weeks ago but not publicly announced
at that time. The command is located at Offutt Air Force Base near
Omaha, Neb.
Air Force Gen. Robert Kehler, who heads Strategic Command, suspended
Giardina, according to the command’s top spokeswoman, Navy Capt. Pamela
Kunze. Giardina is still assigned to the command but is prohibited from
performing duties related to nuclear weapons and other issues requiring a
security clearance, she said.
Kehler has recommended to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel that Giardina
be reassigned, Kunze said. Giardina has been the deputy commander of
Strategic Command since December 2011. He is a career submarine officer
and prior to starting his assignment there was the deputy commander and
chief of staff at U.S. Pacific Fleet.
DCI agents stationed at the Horseshoe Casino in Council Bluffs, Iowa,
discovered the counterfeit chips, Dales said. He would not say when the
discovery was made or how much in counterfeit chips was found, only
that “it was a significant monetary amount.”
Council Bluffs is located across the Missouri River from Omaha.
“We were able to detect this one pretty quickly and jump on it,”
Dales said. He declined to give specifics on how authorities determined
that casino chips had been counterfeited or how Giardina might have been
involved.
Strategic Command oversees the military’s nuclear fighter
units, including the Navy’s nuclear-armed submarines and the Air Force’s
nuclear bombers and nuclear land-based missiles.
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