Navy investigates lewd videos

Navy Captain Owen Honors.

Navy Captain Owen Honors.

Published Jan 4, 2011

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Norfolk - Videos just coming to light show how the crew of a Navy aircraft carrier got an eyeful on shipboard TV: Gay slurs, suggestive shower scenes and mimicked masturbation in clips made not by some sailor run amok, but by the ship's second-most powerful officer.

The Navy said on Sunday it will investigate the “clearly inappropriate” videos shown through the nuclear-powered ship's closed-circuit television system. The star of the videos, made in 2006 and 2007, is Captain Owen Honors, who now commands the USS Enterprise but was its executive officer - the second in command - when the videos were made. The Norfolk-based Enterprise was deployed in the Middle East at the time the videos were made and is weeks from deploying again.

The Virginian-Pilot newspaper reported on the videos in its Sunday editions and posted an edited version of one video on its website.

It's not immediately known why the images are surfacing now. The Virginian-Pilot quoted anonymous crew members who said they raised concerns aboard the ship about the videos when they aired, but they were brushed off.

But a former crew member who says she saw the videos while serving praised Honors as “the best the Navy has to offer” and said the skits were welcome entertainment onboard.

“It's no worse then anything you'd see on Saturday Night Live or the Family Guy,” said Houston native Misty Davis, who worked on the Enterprise's weapons systems during her 2006-2010 tour.

It's clear from the videos that Honors, who took over the ship's command in May, had already received complaints when some of them were made. “Over the years I've gotten several complaints about inappropriate material during these videos, never to me personally but, gutlessly, through other channels,” he said in the introduction to the video posted by the newspaper.

He goes on to use a derogatory term for gays and tells his critics: “This evening, all of you bleeding hearts ... why don't you just go ahead and hug yourselves for the next 20 minutes or so, because there's a really good chance you're gonna be offended.”

Next comes a sequence of what appear to be outtakes in which Honors and others curse, followed by clips in which he and others are shown making hand motions that mimic masturbation.

Honors segues to the next segment by saying: “Finally let's get to my favourite topic... Chicks in the shower.” Next are shown clips of pairs of women and a pair of men pretending to shower together. No nudity is shown, but the men's and women's bare shoulders imply they are nude.

Other clips in the video show a man in drag and a mock rectal examination.

Navy Commander Chris Sims said in a statement sent to The Associated Press that the videos “were not acceptable then and are not acceptable in today's Navy”.

Executive officers and other leaders “are charged to lead by example and are held accountable for setting the proper tone and upholding the standards of honour, courage and commitment that we expect sailors to exemplify”, he said.

Sims said US Fleet Forces Command “has initiated an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the production of these videos”.

In a statement to the Virginian-Pilot on Friday, however, the Navy said it had put a stop to videos with “inappropriate content” on the Enterprise several years ago.

“It is unfortunate that copies of these videos remained accessible to crewmembers, especially after leadership took action approximately four years ago to ensure any future videos reflected the proper tone,” the Navy said.

A phone listing for Honors was not immediately available. He is a 1983 alumnus of the US Naval Academy and was a naval aviator before holding command. He attended the US Naval Fighter Weapons School, also known as Top Gun.

The newspaper reported that the videos were made during the Enterprise's two six-month deployments to the Middle East in 2006 and 2007.

Commissioned in 1961, the Enterprise is the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. It is scheduled to sail two more deployments before it is decommissioned in 2013. It can carry a crew of more than 5 800. - Sapa-AP

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