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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Ravaged by fire, USS Bonhomme Richard bound for scrapyard, Navy says
2020-12-01
[SDUnionTrib] A fire that raged for almost five days in July has doomed the San Diego-based amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard to the scrapyards, Navy officials announced Monday.

The ship will be decommissioned within a year and will be scrapped, a Navy official told reporters during a conference call Monday. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

The cost of repairing the ship was estimated to be between $2.5 billion and $3.2 billion, said Rear Adm. Eric Ver Hage Monday. The cost and time involved were deemed to be too much by Navy leadership.

"After thorough consideration, the secretary of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations have decided to decommission the USS Bonhomme Richard," said Ver Hage, the commander of Navy Regional Maintenance Center.

The Navy looked at all possible courses of action to "make sure we understood the art of the possible," Ver Hage said. Officials assessed every space on the ship and Ver Hage said about 60 percent of it ‐ the flight deck, the island and many of the decks immediately below them ‐ would need to be completely replaced.

The Navy looked at three options for the ship ‐ repairing it to full mission-capabilities, refurbishing it as a tender or hospital ship, or decommissioning, Ver Hage said.

In addition to the expense, rebuilding the Bonhomme Richard would take five to seven years, Ver Hage said. To reconfigure the ship would cost more than $1 billion ‐ more than the cost of building a brand new tender or hospital ship.

Decommissioning will cost the Navy about $30 million and will take between nine months and one year, Ver Hage said. He talked of possibly towing it to storage or to shipbreakers in the Gulf of Mexico, adding that no contract has been awarded yet.

The decision to decommission the ship was made by Navy leaders just before Thanksgiving, Ver Hage said, and Navy leadership and Congress were briefed on the decision Monday.

The fire on the 844-foot ship docked at Naval Base San Diego began around 8:30 a.m. on July 12 ‐ a Sunday ‐ and sent acrid plumes of smoke into the San Diego skies for two days.
Temperatures topped 1,200 degrees F at the height of the inferno.

By the following Tuesday morning, the smoke plume was noticeably smaller, although the fire smell stayed in neighborhoods nearest the base for another two days.

An email from the Navy's top admiral days after the fire revealed the ship had fire, smoke and water damage on 11 of its 14 decks. Some decks were warped and bulging and, in some spaces, completely gutted.

The cause of the blaze remains under investigation, although officials have said the fire began in the ship's lower vehicle storage area. Arson is suspected. The Naval Criminal Investigative Service searched the home of a Bonhomme Richard sailor in August, according to an ABC 10News report. A San Diego Navy official declined to comment on the sailor or the status of the multiple ongoing investigations Monday
This is a clearly popular topic. Alaska Paul submitted gCaptain’s report, and Abu Uluque gave us The Drive’s, commenting:
Pictures and video at the link.

As I noted while the fire was still burning in July, it smelled like an electrical fire as far as 30 miles north of San Diego Bay.
Related:
USS Bonhomme Richard: 2020-07-26 NASSCO Awarded $10 Million Contract for Bonhomme Richard Clean-Up
USS Bonhomme Richard: 2020-07-19 Here's what the damage inside the Bonhomme Richard looks like
USS Bonhomme Richard: 2020-07-17 Navy says ship fire in San Diego is now out
Posted by:Frank G

#6  I saved your comment for posterity above, Abu Uluque, and the two articles on the subject in the hopper have been sent to electron heaven. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife   2020-12-01 15:38  

#5  No need for my post on the same subject that I submitted for Tomorrow. A big loss for the navy and national security. If it was an arsonist, he/she/it should be hung from the yardarm.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2020-12-01 15:07  

#4  My money is on a black, female sailor who wanted to be off and started a fire to get out of something...
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2020-12-01 13:26  

#3  Who did it and why don’t we know the answer yet
Posted by: TZSenator   2020-12-01 12:44  

#2  The arsonist won this one...
Posted by: 49 Pan   2020-12-01 12:28  

#1  Not surprising. The major discoloration of the hull showed the steel was de-tempered. They would have had to replace the whole thing. Might as well just build from scratch at that point.
Posted by: DarthVader   2020-12-01 11:56  

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