Defense News: Indiana Guard Soldiers Render Aid to Pedestrian Struck by Car

Source: United States Army

WASHINGTON – Soldiers from the Indiana National Guard assigned to the D.C. Safe and Beautiful mission rushed to aid a pedestrian struck by a vehicle at the corner of 16th and V streets NW the evening of Feb. 2.

Indiana Guard members patrolling nearby witnessed the incident and immediately responded. Spc. William Morris, who is nearing completion of his nursing degree, treated the pedestrian using his military training and civilian education.

Staff Sgt. Nicholas Adams said he saw a man running erratically and shouting before stepping into the intersection without checking for oncoming traffic.

Moments later, a vehicle struck the man, Adams said.

“We heard a loud impact — a sharp crack,” said Spc. Brenton Myers. “We immediately ran toward the scene.”

The impact was audible from half a block away, Adams said.

The Soldiers’ training kicked in instantly. As they sprinted toward the injured man, Myers dialed 911 and was on the phone with dispatch before they reached him. Once at his side, their movements were quick and coordinated.

“Bowlin and another Soldier began directing traffic,” Adams recalled. At the same time, “Morris checked the victim’s condition without moving him.”

Morris assessed the man’s airway, breathing and pulse.

“He was breathing and conscious but disoriented,” Morris said. When asked his name, the man gave multiple different answers and did not seem aware of where he was.

The driver stopped immediately and cooperated with the Soldiers’ instructions to move the vehicle safely to the side of the road.

Within minutes, additional support from their unit arrived and helped redirect traffic until fire and emergency medical personnel were on scene.

The injured man repeatedly tried to stand and run, falling several times. For his own safety, emergency medical personnel sedated him.

The unit’s medic, Spc. Jesus Herrera assisted the EMS crew by applying a cervical collar and checking the man’s pupils.

For the Soldiers, the response was instinctual.

“My first thought was, ‘This is real — I need to act,’” Morris said. “We were already moving before he hit the ground and training kicked in immediately.”

“None of us hesitated,” Adams said. “Securing the scene, calling 911, directing traffic. It all happened within about 30 seconds.”

“From my perspective, this was textbook scene management,” said 2nd Lt. Craig Schiesser, who also works in law enforcement as a civilian. “Clear communication, decisive leadership, and teamwork.”

The Feb. 2 collision reflects the type of incident the D.C. Safe and Beautiful mission was established to address. The mission serves as a bridge between federal priorities and local action to curb hazards and help restore order.

For the Guard members and first responders involved, the incident reinforced their goal of making the District safer. It underscores the Guard’s dual mission — defending the nation while sharpening crisis-response skills to better serve the communities in which they live, work, and serve.

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Defense News: Pennsylvania Guard Soldiers Strengthen AI, Critical Thinking Skills

Source: United States Army

FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. — Pennsylvania National Guard Soldiers and civilian employees participated in an Artificial Intelligence 201 course Feb. 11–12.

The course, taught by U.S. Army War College faculty, aimed to prepare leaders to responsibly integrate artificial intelligence into military decision-making while reinforcing critical thinking and mission command principles.

“A lot of people find it very scary, and just like with any new technology, we should be cautious,” said Lt. Col. Kelly Ihme, an assistant professor at the U.S. Army War College and one of the course’s instructors. “Trust but verify. But this is a computer program. It’s predictive math.”

AI 101 introduces Soldiers to the basics of AI, including how to use and understand it, while AI 201 focuses on critical thinking and effective AI prompting.

“At the War College, we’re starting to develop that type of course,” Ihme said. “It’s more about, how do we think about problems? And then where does AI get inserted into those problem sets? So that we’re never taking the human out of the loop, but we’re stepping up the critical thinking and really engaging critical skills questions on AI and where it fits.”

The students found the classes useful and knowledgeable, even wanting to attend more in the future.

“If they had another AI class, I would go again,” said Maj. Maria Myers, logistics branch chief at Joint Force Headquarters. “I would even do this exact same level again, just for repetition and to make sure that I’m still using it correctly, because I do plan to try to implement it in a couple of ways already that they had mentioned.”

Ihme said the 201 course pushes students to dig deeper than the nuts and bolts of AI. The class encourages them to approach AI with a leadership mindset.

“It’s a mission command skill. And if you’re not using AI with some of those mission command ideals in mind, you’re going to get icky outputs or less efficient outputs, and then you’re going to put AI aside,” said Ihme. “You’re not going to throw a private aside and tell them they’re an ineffective private because you didn’t provide them the leadership they needed to succeed. It’s the same with AI.”

Myers said that while she believes AI should be used with caution, it remains a helpful tool for saving time. But, she emphasized that users need to understand how to properly use and prompt AI before utilizing it for work.

“I’m sure some people will think it’s a pain, and there will be people that are against it, because it’s different,” Myers said. “But I think that this class and the level it goes into is a good introductory class because you need to have the knowledge and the understanding and the information from the human aspect to get the appropriate answer.”

The Pennsylvania National Guard is hoping to expand these classes in an effort to have Fort Indiantown Gap become an AI center of excellence, Imhe said. Ihme said she is ready for the next step of AI in the Army.

“Let’s keep providing classes like this, both foundational and thinking classes, so that we can figure out, not just that we’re playing with AI, but that we’re taking the next leap of using AI to propel us forward,” Ihme said.

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Defense News: National Guard’s Vice Chief Credits Georgia’s ‘Leadership Factory’

Source: United States Army

WASHINGTON – Gen. Thomas Carden has been appointed vice chief of the National Guard Bureau, bringing nearly four decades of experience to the organization that oversees more than 435,000 Soldiers and Airmen.

For Carden, the title “vice” is familiar. He explained that, like his previous deputy roles, the position is fundamentally about amplifying the commander’s intent.

“The vice or the deputy doesn’t have his or her own vision for strategy,” said Carden. “They figure out what the chief wants to accomplish in time and space to enable the 54 states and territories to do what they do best, and that’s generate readiness, lethality and capability for the joint force.”

Carden’s journey began on a peanut farm in southern Georgia, spanning nearly four decades from his enlistment as a private to the assumption of his current duties. After receiving his commission, he rose steadily through the ranks of the Georgia National Guard. In 2015, he assumed command of the Georgia Army National Guard and later served as the state’s adjutant general from 2019 to 2024.

Carden credits his success to the teams he has served with and the leaders who mentored him.

“First of all, it’s emblematic of the Guard as a leadership factory,” Carden said. “It’s really not about me. It’s been about everybody that I’ve served with, for, and around for almost 40 years. If it had been up to me alone, I would have been lucky to make it through my first enlistment.”

Many of his philosophies on leadership stem from his experience in the Georgia National Guard, which he says cultivates a unique culture of mentorship in which leaders identify problems and make immediate “course corrections” for one another.

“We’ve had a culture throughout my career where our leaders … if they saw something that wasn’t to standard or that you could do a little bit better … they would pull you aside and help coach you a little bit. It was very much a culture of leadership, not liker-ship,” he said, adding a common military adage: “I’d rather hurt your feelings than go to your funeral.”

Regarding mentorship, Carden encourages junior leaders to proactively seek honest feedback and guidance from senior leaders.

When Carden was a new rifle platoon leader during a National Training Center rotation at Fort Irwin in the early 1990s, he noticed the commander of an adjacent company, Scott Carter, who carried himself in a way Carden wanted to emulate. Carden approached him, asked questions and took notes that proved invaluable during the rotation.

“The lesson I learned,” Carden said, “is just don’t wait for the organization to assign you a mentor. You go recruit your own mentor.” Even now, as a four-star general, he says, “If I had a hard problem right now, I’d pick up the phone and call Scott Carter.”

He also recommends that leaders seek roles that push them outside their comfort zones.

“If you want to reach your full potential in the Guard, you need an assignment that requires the issuance of and frequent wear of a helmet,” he said.

For him, that meant spending 18 of his 40 years with the 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, an organization that spends significantly more time in austere locations than in office spaces he refers to as “the land of climate control and ultraviolet light.”

Those demanding “helmet jobs” often meant stepping outside his comfort zone. He had just 15 days’ notice before moving to Bucharest, Romania, for his first flag officer role outside Georgia in 2017.

“I mailed seven cardboard boxes and took five suitcases,” Carden recalled.

His most recently completed assignment at U.S. Northern Command was similar, arriving where he “didn’t know a soul” after a career spent mostly with familiar faces.

“You’ve gotta go out there every day and earn it,” he said.

Carden acknowledges that those assignments came at a cost and encourages service members to seek balance between work and family life whenever possible. He reflects on how his wife largely raised their two children while he was often away.

“Like every other parent with kids out of the house,” he said, “I wish I had been able to spend more time with them when they were little.”

His life and career experiences now drive Carden’s mission to help oversee the National Guard’s strategy. He is part of an organization that provides 20% of the nation’s joint force on just 4% of the Department of Defense’s budget, with priorities including the warfight, homeland defense and partnerships, according to its May 2025 posture statement.

Carden believes the best way to achieve those objectives is by requiring Soldiers and Airmen to master the fundamentals of their jobs.

“Soldiers and Airmen have to be fully qualified at the position they are in, and they’ve got to be deployable,” said Carden.

For domestic missions, Carden draws on his experience commanding the Georgia National Guard during hurricane response, civil disturbance security, and the global pandemic, which forced the organization to adapt to the challenges posed by COVID-19.

“What we had to do was take the capability we had and bend it around the problem,” said Carden.

At the time, the Georgia Guard’s largest medical company was deployed to Iraq, so leaders generated new formations from scratch.

“We had to start building these medical teams that didn’t exist,” said Carden.

That innovation led to the development of infection control teams across Georgia to sanitize facilities and create safer environments for citizens statewide. The new capability was documented and shared with other military and civilian organizations, which adopted the concepts.

Carden credits those teams with saving many lives.

Now that his responsibility has grown to include 53 additional states and territories, he sees other National Guard organizations as “innovation incubators” prepared to provide similar solutions to unique challenges.

Carden’s experience also extends to the Guard’s third core mission: building global partnerships. As Georgia’s adjutant general, he oversaw a busy State Partnership Program, fostering relationships with Georgia and Argentina. In his new role, he could potentially lend his expertise to the execution of more than 1,000 events with 155 state partners worldwide.

As Carden begins his tenure as the 12th vice chief, he is focused on ensuring the Guard is “brilliant at the basics.” But for a leader whose journey is defined by adaptation and mentorship, the ultimate lesson is one of continual growth.

“Senior leaders have got to be senior learners,” he said. “If you ever quit learning, you’re going to quit growing and you won’t be able to contribute.”

Twenty-Seven Members and Associates of Tren de Aragua Splinter Faction Anti-Tren Charged With 2024 Double Murder in New York and Sex Trafficking, Kidnapping, Racketeering, and Other Offenses

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

A 38-count superseding indictment (S4 indictment) was unsealed today charging 27 members of the Anti-Tren faction of the designated foreign terrorist organization Tren de Aragua (TDA or TdA) with offenses including racketeering conspiracy, murder in aid of racketeering in connection with an April 15, 2024, double murder in the Bronx, New York, murder-for-hire conspiracy, kidnapping in aid of racketeering, sex trafficking and sex trafficking conspiracy, and other offenses. Twenty-one of the 27 defendants charged in the S4 indictment were previously charged in a 12-count indictment. Of the six newly added defendants, five are now in federal custody.

To date, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York has charged approximately 38 members or associates of TDA and Anti-Tren.

“As alleged, these members of Anti-Tren, a splinter faction of the terrorist organization Tren de Aragua, planned and carried out a series of horrific crimes, including gunpoint robberies, murders, and the exploitation of vulnerable young women through sex trafficking,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton for the Southern District of New York (SDNY). “Tren de Aragua is in the business of murder, sex trafficking, and intimidation, and they brought that business to New York while being unlawfully present in the United States. Today’s charges reflect our commitment to bankrupt TDA and bring its members to justice. The gang members charged today exerted ruthless control over sex trafficking victims through intimidation, brutality, and threats of violence against them and their loved ones — leaving lasting trauma in their wake. The women and men of the SDNY are unwavering in their commitment to bankrupt gangs that corrupt our neighborhoods, prey on the vulnerable, and pursue violence as a way of life.”

“Homeland Security Investigations New York continues to stand at the forefront of investigations against vicious criminal enterprises like Tren de Aragua and Anti-Tren,” said Acting Executive Associate Director John A. Condon for Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). “Through their use of ruthless tactics and blatant disregard for human life, TdA and its offshoots are among the fastest emerging transnational criminal organizations to encroach upon American soil. HSI New York, through the Homeland Security Task Force, continues to target these gangs that seek to perpetrate destruction and terror in our communities. Together, alongside our law enforcement partners, we are committed to ensuring that no corners of the TdA and Anti-Tren enterprises are beyond the reach of justice.”

“TdA and its faction Anti-Tren grew from a prison gang to a transnational criminal organization to a foreign terrorist organization. The violence and horrific acts as charged here including the double murder, murder for hire, kidnapping, and sex trafficking will be met with the full weight of our justice system,” said Co-Director Christopher Eason of Joint Task Force Vulcan (JTFV). “The charges against these TdA associates and Anti-Tren members are directly in line with JTFV’s mission: a collaborative, whole of government effort to destroy TdA and its factions. We are grateful for our partnership with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, and our law enforcement partners who worked tirelessly to investigate and bring these important charges.”

According to the allegations contained in the S4 indictment, Anti-Tren is a criminal organization almost exclusively comprised of former members and associates of TDA. Anti-Tren operated throughout New York City, including the boroughs of the Bronx and Queens, and in New Jersey, and elsewhere around the country, including in Illinois and Washington. The purposes of Anti-Tren included:

  • Preserving and protecting the power and territory of Anti-Tren and its members and associates through acts involving murder, assault, other acts of violence, and threats of violence, including acts of violence and threats of violence directed at members and associates of TDA;
  • Enriching the members and associates of Anti-Tren through, among other things:
    • The unlawful smuggling of individuals, including women and girls from Venezuela, into the United States,
    • The sex trafficking of young women or “multadas” who had been unlawfully smuggled into the United States,
    • The trafficking of controlled substances, including “tusi,” and
    • Armed robberies;
  • Keeping victims and potential victims in fear of Anti-Tren and its members and associates through threats and acts of violence;
  • Promoting and enhancing Anti-Tren and the reputation and activities of its members and associates;
  • Providing assistance to members and associates of Anti-Tren who committed crimes for and on behalf of Anti-Tren, such as lodging and interstate transportation for members and associates of Anti-Tren to flee prosecution, or bail money for members or associates of Anti-Tren who are detained; and
  • Protecting Anti-Tren and its members and associates from detection and prosecution by law enforcement authorities through acts of intimidation, threats, and violence against potential witnesses to crimes committed by members of Anti-Tren.

Anti-Tren engaged in human smuggling and sex trafficking of young women or “multadas,” into the United States in exchange for debts that the young women would pay back by engaging in commercial sex work. Like TDA, members of Anti-Tren enforced compliance among these young women by, among other things:

  • Threatening to kill the young women and their families,
  • Assaulting the young women,
  • Shooting or killing the young women, and
  • Tracking down and kidnapping the young women who tried to flee.

Members of Anti-Tren also committed and conspired, attempted, and threatened to commit, acts of violence, including acts involving murder and assault, to protect and to expand Anti-Tren’s criminal operations, resolve disputes within Anti-Tren, to retaliate against rival organizations, including Tren de Aragua itself, and to maintain control over sex trafficking victims. Anti-Tren members and associates also trafficked controlled substances, committed robberies, and obtained, possessed, trafficked, and used firearms and ammunition.

The new charges in the S4 indictment allege, among other things, that:

  • On or about April 15, 2024, Yender Mata, Ervin Hernandez, also known as “Coco” and “Coquito,” and Kerlyn Nataliy Perez-Lopez, also known as “Mou,” conspired to murder and caused the murders of Jhombeyker Jose Bisbal Pina and Adrian Mendoza Isturiz, who were shot to death in the Bronx.
  • In or about April 2025, Guillermo Enrique Freites-Velazquez and Roiman Noe Bello Ferrer conspired to kill an individual in New York (Intended Victim-1).
  • From in or about February 2025 until in or about March 2025, David Valencia-De La Rosa and Johan Carlos Mujica-Urpin, also known as “Sobrino,” conspired to kill another individual in New York (Intended Victim-2).
  • In or about April 2025, Roiman Noe Bello Ferrer and others conspired to kill an individual in Florida (Intended Victim-3).
  • On or about Oct. 5, 2024, Jesus David Barrios Garcia, also known as “Morocho,” ordered Kellen Jaspe Bustamanate to shoot an Anti-Tren member in the leg as a form of gang punishment. On or about the same day, Barrios Garcia also ordered Enrique Gustavo Boada Yanez, also known as “Chino,” to shoot a different Anti-Tren member in the leg, also as gang punishment.
  • In or about January 2025, Keiswuel Orlando Palacios-Milano, also known as “Oturache” and “Inmortalidad,” Anderson Smith Zambrano-Pacheco, and Yeferson Prieto Galviz, also known as “Flacot” and “Flacote,” conspired to commit and did commit a gunpoint home invasion robbery of an individual (Robbery Victim-1) and Robbery Victim-1’s family in Yonkers.
  • In or about January 2025, Keiswuel Orlando Palacios-Milano, also known as “Oturache” and “Inmortalidad,” Anderson Zambrano-Pacheco, Mario Pereda, also known as “Cara de Hombre,” Wilfredo Jose Avendaño Carrizalez, also known as “Kabuvy,” and Carlos Gabriel Santos Mogollon, conspired to commit a gunpoint robbery of a drug trafficker (Robbery Victim-2) in the Bronx.
  • In or about 2024, Luis Jose Velasquez-Hurtado, also known as “Chito,” engaged in sex trafficking of a young woman from Venezuela (Trafficking Victim-1) whom Velasquez-Hurtado threatened with a gun, caused to be kidnapped, and whose immigration documents Velasquez-Hurtado caused to be seized.
  • In or about 2024, Jesus David Barrios Garcia, also known as “Morocho,” Enrique Gustavo Boada Yanez, also known as “Chino,” Jesus Ruben Lopez Gonzalez, also known as “Lopez,” and Danger Leoner Sanchez Alfonzo, also known as “Danger,” engaged in sex trafficking of another young woman from Venezuela (Trafficking Victim-2).

A chart containing the names, charges, and maximum penalties for the defendants is set forth below.

The maximum potential sentences in this case are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendants will be determined by the judge.

U.S. Attorney Clayton praised the outstanding investigative work of HSI New York, Seattle, Chicago, and Portland, and the NYPD. He also thanked Joint Task Force Vulcan; the Arapahoe County District Attorney’s Office; the Aurora Police Department in Aurora, Colorado; the New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force of the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS); the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s National Gang Unit and New York Human Intelligence Division; U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s New York and Chicago Enforcement and Removal Operations; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF); U.S. Marshals Service-District of Oregon; U.S. Customs and Border Protection-New York; the New York City Crime Analysis Center at the New York/New Jersey High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area; the Computer Crimes Unit at the NYPD; the King County, Washington Sheriff’s Office; and the Seattle Police Department.

This case is a part of JTFV, which was created in 2019 to eradicate MS-13 and is now expanded to target Tren de Aragua. The JTFV is comprised of U.S. Attorney’s Offices across the country, including the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York; Eastern and Western Districts of North Carolina; Eastern and Western Districts of Virginia; Southern District of Florida; Eastern District of Texas; Western District of Oklahoma; Northern District of Indiana; and the District of Nevada, as well as the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys, Department of Justice’s National Security Division and the Criminal Division. Additionally, the FBI, DEA, HSI, ATF, USMS, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons are essential law enforcement partners with JTFV.

This case is part of Operation Take Back America, a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Justice Department to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations, and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime. Operation Take Back America streamlines efforts and resources from the Department’s Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces and Project Safe Neighborhood.

This case is being handled by JTFV and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jun Xiang, Kathryn Wheelock, Timothy Ly, and Andrew K. Chan for the Southern District of New York are in charge of the prosecution.

The charges contained in the indictment are merely accusations. All defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Honduran Man Sentenced For Illegal Reentry

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA – DENIS EDGARDO BUEZO-ZELAYA (“BUEZO”), age 33, was sentenced on February 3, 2026 after previously pleading guilty to illegal reentry of a removed alien, in violation of Title 8, United States Code, Section 1326(a), announced United States Attorney David I. Courcelle.

Arizona Man Sentenced for Illegally Possessing Firearms After Communicating Online with Australian Killers

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

PHOENIX, Ariz. – An Arizona man who came to law enforcement’s attention as part of an investigation into the murder of two police officers and one civilian in Queensland, Australia, was sentenced yesterday in federal court to three years in prison for illegally possessing firearms and ammunition. 

Jury Convicts Tuba City Man of Second Degree Murder, Aggravated Assault, and Robbery

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

PHOENIX, Ariz. – On Feb. 5, 2026, a federal jury found Derick Lee Myron, 45, of Tuba City, Arizona, guilty of one count of Second-Degree Murder, three counts of Assault with a Dangerous Weapon, two counts of Assault Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury, four counts of Discharging a Firearm During and In Relation to a Crime of Violence, and one count of Robbery. The guilty verdict followed an eight-day jury trial before U.S. District Judge Michael T. Liburdi. Sentencing is scheduled for May 19, 2026.

District Man Pleads Guilty to Second-Degree Murder Charge

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

Dearay Wilson, 30, of Washington, D.C., pleaded guilty today to second-degree murder while armed for his role in the shooting death of 50-year-old D.C. resident Jeremy Black on the evening of June 29, 2021, in Northwest D.C., announced U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro.