BBC News, 9
October 2013
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| Navy Vice-Adm Tim Giardina was relieved of command following allegations of illegal gambling activities |
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A US Navy
admiral who oversees the nation's nuclear weapons forces has been sacked, a
Navy spokesman has said.
Vice-Adm
Tim Giardina, second-in-command of the US Strategic Command, is under
investigation for illegal gambling activities.
He is
accused of using counterfeit gambling chips in "a significant monetary
amount" at an Iowa casino.
Adm
Giardina was demoted to a two-star admiral and will be reassigned pending
outcome of the inquiry.
On
Wednesday, the Navy's top spokesman Rear Adm John Kirby announced the removal
of Adm Giardina as the deputy in charge of the US Strategic Command.
Adm
Giardina, a career submarine officer, was suspended from duty on 3 September
after the military launched an investigation into allegations he used
counterfeit chips at a casino not far from his base in eastern Nebraska.
The case
was referred to the US Naval Criminal Investigative Service after he first came
to be suspected of the crime.
Security
clearance
In
September, Special Agent David Dales of the Iowa Division of Criminal
Investigation told the Associated Press news agency "a significant
monetary amount" was involved.
"We
were able to detect this one pretty quickly and jump on it," he added.
It is unknown
whether Adm Giardina's alleged actions at the Horseshoe Casino in Council
Bluffs, Iowa, compromised national security or operations at Strategic Command.
Strategic
Command, which oversees everything from America's land-based nuclear missiles
to space operations governing military satellites, is located at Offutt Air
Force Base near Omaha, Nebraska.
Adm
Giardina's demotion follows several other incidents affecting the US military's
nuclear establishment.
In August,
a nuclear missile unit at Malstrom Air Force base in Montana failed a safety
and security inspection, after which a senior security officer was relieved of
duty.
In May, it
was reported that 17 officers in charge of maintaining nuclear missiles were
sidelined over safety violations at Minot Air Force base in North Dakota.

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