PORTLAND, Maine — Three Army Reserve officers were disciplined for dereliction of duty following a rampage in which a reservist killed 18 people in Maine, according to an Army report that cited communication failures within the chain of command and between military and civilian hospitals, among other shortcomings.
The report released Tuesday unearthed ''a series of failures by unit leadership,'' said Lt. Gen. Jody Daniels, chief of the Army Reserves, and administrative actions taken against the officers could prevent their further military advancement. The officers weren't identified.
Survivors and victims' family members have been critical over missed opportunities to prevent the October 2023 attack. Family members and fellow reservists noticed the gunman exhibiting delusional and paranoid behavior months earlier.
''My heart and soul goes out to all those families, the folks that were witnesses to what happened,'' Daniels told reporters. ''We're doing the best that we can in terms of understanding what did transpire, then make changes for the future.''
The partially redacted report noted the gunman, Sgt. 1st Class Robert Card, had previously fallen from a ladder, a potential cause of head injuries uncovered in a post-mortem examination. Daniels said emphatically that there was no tie between his brain injury and his military service, even though the defense department is looking into the potential for damage caused by exposure to repeated blasts.
The 40-year-old Card, amid a spiraling mental health crisis, made alarming statements before the shooting. The investigation indicated Card had a ''hit list,'' bragged he could kill 100 people with a rifle scope he'd bought, and told a health care provider that he decided to quit his job ''before he ended up killing someone," the report said.
The report, and an Army's Inspector General report that was also released Tuesday, illustrate that ''the system failed,'' said Travis Brennan, an attorney representing families of Lewiston victims.
''The reports paint a very clear picture that there were numerous errors along the path leading up to this tragedy,'' Brennan said. ''There were repeated warning signs that the shooter displayed before the shootings.''