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A woman mistakenly received a box of Marine Corps urine samples that were sent for drug testing. The Marine Corps sent me a box full of piss. I m not even f kidding, Andrea Fisher tweeted.
The Marine Corps said it has since recovered the package and said it was sent to Fisher by mistake.
Andrea Fisher took to Twitter on March 1 after receiving a strange package addressed to her with a return address of Commanding Officer 22th Marine Regiment.
Fisher was shocked when she opened the package to find four separate containers labeled CLINICAL SPECIMENS - URINE SAMPLES that were addressed to the Navy Drug Screening Laboratory in Great Lakes, Illinois.
The Naval Criminal Investigative Service is leading the investigation into the disappearance of about 10 pounds of C4 plastic explosive at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms in California.
New in 2021: Going to the field may look different for Marines January 12 Marines with India Company, 3rd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, participate in live-fire assaults on range Golf-36 (G-36), Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Dec. 12, 2020. (Lance Cpl. Jacqueline Parsons/Marine Corps) In 2020 the Marine Corps laid out the initial force design plan for the Corps’ next decade. The smaller, tankless, more mobile force laid out in spring 2020 is still missing a few details the Corps hopes to work out over the next few years, during “phase three” of the force design. The three-year experimental phase will see Marines heading to the field more, spending more time working with the Navy, and having Marines experiment more with nonscripted training events against equal or superiorly equipped opponents.
December 28, 2020 A Marine with 2nd Combat Engineer Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, receives orders over the radio before conducting breaching exercises aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Dec. 8, 2014. (Lance Cpl. Preston McDonald/Marine Corps) The year 2021 will go down as the year that the Marine Corps ditched its tank Marines. Though the official decision came down in March 2020 from Maine Corps Commandant Gen. David Berger, and the tanks rolled away on train cars from 1st Tank Battalion, 2nd Tank Battalion, and 4th Tank Battalion this past summer, the tankers themselves are still in uniform and their units remain at least for a few more months.