Family: Military policeman was shooting victim

Family: Military policeman was shooting victim

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) — The father of a sailor from Maryland says his son was the victim killed when a civilian approached a destroyer docked at a naval base and disarmed a sailor on watch.

Decondi Mayo says a Navy representative told him Tuesday that his son Mark Mayo had been killed.

Decondi Mayo spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday outside a Hagerstown home.

Mark Mayo's mother, Sharon Blair, tells The Herald-Mail newspaper (http://bit.ly/1fhiiSs) her son spent his adolescence in the home and was 24 when he was killed in the Monday shooting at the Norfolk, Va., base.

Navy officials say a civilian approached the USS Mahan, disarmed a sailor and shot another who came to help. They haven't identified the civilian.

Blair tells the paper Mayo had been a military policeman since completing special forces training in 2008 and patrolled the base.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

Navy officials are searching for answers about what might have motivated a civilian to approach a docked destroyer, struggle with security personnel, disarm a sailor, then shoot and kill a military policeman coming to help.

The civilian was shot and killed by Navy security forces shortly after the encounter late Monday night aboard the USS Mahan at Naval Station Norfolk, the world's largest naval base.

The unidentified civilian was authorized to be on base, but it wasn't immediately clear for what reason or why he would want to approach the guided-missile destroyer, which shares a pier with a hospital ship, the USNS Comfort.

The Navy said the civilian was coming toward the ship's quarterdeck, which is traditionally the ceremonial entry point of a ship, when he got into a struggle with the Petty Officer of the Watch, whom he was able to disarm.

The sailor who was killed was coming to help the petty officer, according to the Navy. The victim was a military policeman from Maryland, the man's father told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Mark Mayo, 24, had been a military policeman since completing special forces training in 2008, and he patrolled the Norfolk base, his mother, Sharon Blair, told The Herald-Mail newspaper, which first reported details about the victim (http://bit.ly/1fhiiSs). He spent his adolescence in Hagerstown, she said.

Decondi Mayo said Navy representatives told him during a visit Tuesday that his son had been killed.

No other injuries were reported from the encounter.

To get onto the base, civilians must be escorted or have identification that allows them to be there. Authorized civilians include Department of Defense employees, contractors and military family members.

Capt. Robert Clark, Naval Station Norfolk's commanding officer, said Tuesday that identification found with the civilian indicates it is unlikely he was a military dependent authorized to be on base for that reason.

Clark said the civilian was found with a TWIC card, a transportation worker's credential issued by the Transportation Security Administration to personnel such as truck drivers who require unescorted access to secure areas. But he said it was unclear what exactly the civilian's job was or when he worked on the base.

All merchant mariners are required to have a TWIC card, including employees of the Navy's Military Sealift Command, which hires civilians to crew its ships, including the USNS Comfort. The cards are valid for five years, according to the TSA.

Each base entrance is guarded, and motorists present IDs. Inspections are rare, and Clark noted that the civilian did not bring a weapon on base.

Clark said the base would review its security procedures but also said the Navy's response shows that "force protection is working."

All 13 piers have additional security forces that guard access. As part of ongoing security efforts, handheld ID scanners were implemented this year at Navy bases in the region, including the Norfolk station.

The shooting on the Mahan comes about a month after the Navy held anti-terrorism and force protection exercises on bases across the U.S., including an active-shooter drill at Naval Station Norfolk. And it follows a September incident at the Washington Navy Yard, in which a gunman — identified as a contractor and former Navy reservist — killed 12 civilian workers before being shot to death.

The Norfolk base was briefly on lockdown after the Monday night shooting but resumed normal operations aside from the Mahan's pier Tuesday. On social media, many of those who had connections to the ship or sailors aboard it changed their profile pictures to the ship's emblem.

Naval Station Norfolk covers more than 6,000 acres and is the home port for 64 ships, according to information the Navy provided in February. About 46,000 military members and 21,000 civilian government employees and contractors are assigned to the base and its ships, according to the Navy figures.