Fort Hood army vet gets 18 months in prison for stealing $2.1M in military gear from embattled Texas base
Jessica Elaintrell Smith ordered to pay $1.3 million in restitution to Army
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A U.S. army veteran who pleaded guilty to stealing $2.1 million worth of military gear from the embattled Texas base Fort Hood was sentenced last week to just a year and a half behind bars.
Jessica Elaintrell Smith, 30, had already pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government in April. As part of the plea deal, another count on the indictment was dropped.
Smith, along with co-conspirators Nathan Nichols and Brandon Dominic Brown, are accused of taking 68 PAS-13 scopes, 47 RT 1523 radios, nine AN-PSC 5 radios, four PVS-14 scopes, three-night vision devices, three AN/PRC 117 radios, two receiver/transmitters and one AN-VRC-90 radio sometime overnight between June 16-17, 2021.
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Soldiers reported finding locks cut on 17 Conex shipping containers on the base, and an audit showed that a total of 137 items worth about $2.1 million were missing.
"It was a smash-and-grab," Assistant U.S. Attorney Joel Stacey Dunn said on Tuesday, according to The Killeen Daily Herald. "They took whatever they could get."
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Twelve says after the heist, an agent with the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division discovered several of the stolen items matching the same serial number listed for sale on eBay.
U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton on Tuesday sentenced Smith to 18 months in prison, followed by two years of probation. She was also ordered to pay $1.3 million in restitution to the U.S. Army. She was also ordered to pay the U.S. government $100 as part of a "special assessment."
"I want a better reality," Smith said before her sentencing, according to The Killeen Daily Herald. "I want to do better in life, and I’ll never be in this situation again."
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Homeland Security was granted a search warrant for Nichol’s home in July 2021. Investigators found $1.23 million in cash and stolen gear, as well as a phone with conversations between Smith and Nichols dating back to March of that year, according to court documents. Brown said he had access to the base.
Brown, also an Army veteran, pleaded not guilty on Nov. 29, 2021. His case is set for jury trial in September.
Nichols, however, pleaded guilty last year and is expected to be sentenced in October.
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Smith had pleaded guilty in June 2014 to theft in Bell County while she was stationed at Fort Hood and was sentenced to 10 years of probation, according to Stars and Stripes.
She was deployed to Afghanistan that same month and returned by November of that year. Bell County prosecutors reopened her theft case in 2020 when she was charged with felony family assault, violating her probation terms. She worked as a contractor on the base at the time of the theft of radios, scopes, night vision goggles and other gear.
The June 2021 heist came a year after the disappearance and on-base murder of 20-year-old Army specialist Vanessa Guillen on Fort Hood caused a major shake-up for the sprawling military installation in Killeen, Texas. Investigations unveiled "major flaws" with the command climate following a string of deaths, suicides, and complaints of sexual harassment.
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"In the last two years, Fort Hood has made significant changes across its units and across the base," a spokeswoman for the base said in a statement to Fox News Digital.
"At III Armored Corps we focus on People, one of the initiatives that was born as a result of the Fort Hood Investigation Review Committee (FHIRC) findings was 'The People First Center,'" she said, referring to the investigations following Guillen's death. "At the 'People First Center,' we conduct people first training that certifies select leaders on special duty skills to be advocates, and all Soldiers experience immersive lanes that include: Sexual Harassment/Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) Program, Suicide Prevention, Spiritual Readiness, and other training that reinforce trust at every level."
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"While the FHIRC report focused on the command climate and culture at Fort Hood, the findings impact the entire Army and more than 1.2 million Soldiers," the statement added. "The People First Task Force is developing multiple plans to address FHIRC recommendations for combating sexual harassment, sexual assault, violent crimes, and other harmful behaviors that exist in our ranks across the Army."