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Greg Kunkel, Emergency Management Services Chief of Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow (MCLBB), demonstrates a decontamination system to Brig. Gen. Edward D. Banta, Commanding General, Marine Corps Installations-West, at the MCLBB James L. Day Center, Mar. 9, 2016. Kunkel provided a detailed and ha
Photo: Carlos Guerra | Public domain | Wikimedia Commons

Camp Pendleton Marine Charged With Stealing Javelin System and Ammo for Black‑Market Sales

Federal prosecutors have charged Cpl. Andrew Paul Amarillas, an ammunition technical specialist at Camp Pendleton’s School of Infantry West, with stealing at least one Javelin shoulder‑fired missile system, thousands of rounds of military‑grade ammunition and other weapons‑related materials from the California Marine base between February 2022 and November 2025. Court records say Amarillas transported the stolen gear to his home state of Arizona and conspired to sell it to unnamed co‑conspirators, who then resold it, with undercover officers later buying some of the ammunition as part of the investigation. A criminal complaint cites text messages in which a contact listed as “Andrew Ammo” offered “2 launchers” and shows a photo of a portable Javelin whose serial number matches a system Amarillas signed out from the armory. Amarillas pleaded not guilty in Phoenix last Thursday to charges including conspiracy to commit theft and embezzlement of government property and possession and sale of stolen ammunition, and a judge ordered him held pending trial. Authorities say some but not all of the stolen weapons and ammunition have been recovered, and the case follows other recent incidents of missing explosives at Marine installations that have already fueled questions online about security gaps in U.S. military stockpile controls.

U.S. Military Crime and Security Firearms and Weapons Trafficking

📌 Key Facts

  • Defendant identified as Cpl. Andrew Paul Amarillas, an ammunition specialist at Camp Pendleton’s School of Infantry West
  • Prosecutors allege theft of at least one Javelin missile system, thousands of rounds of ammunition and other weapons‑related material from February 2022 to November 2025
  • Stolen items were allegedly transported to Arizona and sold to co‑conspirators; undercover officers later purchased some of the ammunition
  • Complaint quotes August text offering “2 launchers” and includes a photo of a Javelin with a serial number matching one Amarillas had signed out from the base
  • Amarillas pleaded not guilty in U.S. District Court in Phoenix and has been ordered held in custody pending trial; some but not all stolen material has been recovered

📊 Relevant Data

In 2023, 20.1% of active-duty Marine Corps members identified with racial minority groups, and 27.7% were Hispanic or Latino, compared to the U.S. population where approximately 19% are Hispanic or Latino as of 2023.

2023 Demographic Profile Marine Corps Active-Duty Members — Military OneSource

Black and Hispanic service members are more likely than White service members to be subjects of recorded investigations, non-judicial punishments, and court-martial proceedings across the Department of Defense.

Internal Review Team on Racial Disparities in the Investigative and Military Justice Systems of the Department of Defense — Department of Defense

Between 2020 and 2024, at least four FBI subjects were involved in discussions or actions related to raiding military facilities for heavy weapons, indicating a pattern of organized thefts from U.S. military and National Guard armories.

Mysterious Crime Spree Targeted National Guard Equipment Stashes — Wired

An estimated 135,000 guns are trafficked from the U.S. to Mexico annually, with up to 80% of weapons seized from Mexican cartels believed to originate from the United States.

A surge of weapons is flowing from the US to Mexico. These firearms are fueling cartel violence — Instagram (citing broader reports, but linked to known trafficking data)

📰 Source Timeline (1)

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