Venezuela

US Navy sailor detained in Venezuela, Pentagon says

U.S. State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said Wednesday that the department is monitoring the situation, but did not provide further details

The Pentagon.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

A U.S. Navy sailor has been detained in Venezuela after traveling there unauthorized on personal business, the Pentagon said Wednesday. 

U.S. State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said Wednesday that the department is monitoring the situation, but did not provide further details.

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“The U.S. Navy is looking into this and working closely with the State Department,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

The detention follows a similar disappearance earlier this year when a U.S. Army soldier was arrested after traveling to Russia to visit his girlfriend.

Staff Sgt. Gordon Black, 34, is still in Russia and was sentenced in June to three years and nine months in prison after his girlfriend accused him of stealing from her.

Black remains an active duty member of the U.S. Army but was placed in confined civilian authority status in May, which is a non-pay status, the Army said in a statement to the AP.

Last week, the attorney for Travis King, another Army private who fled to North Korea last year, said that King will plead guilty to desertion and four other charges and take responsibility for his conduct. King will be given an opportunity at a Sept. 20 hearing at Fort Bliss, Texas, to discuss his actions and explain what he did.

In December the United States freed a close ally of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in exchange for the release of 10 Americans imprisoned in the South American country and the return of a fugitive defense contractor known as “Fat Leonard” who was at the center of a massive Pentagon bribery scandal.

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