Soon after Marines gathered to remember Cpl. Drew Mobley, command staff at the Aircraft Rescue and Fire Fighting (ARFF) unit in Quantico reportedly collected their phones, closed the doors, and began confronting criticism of the command.
That’s according to a meeting captured in secret recordings obtained and originally reported by The War Horse, addressing Mobley’s April 7, 2025, suicide and command climate concerns among Marines assigned to ARFF. Several Marines reportedly told investigators they believed leadership failures contributed to deteriorating morale within the unit.
The Marine Corps’ suicide prevention procedures, updated just four days before the gathering, emphasize the importance of trust, active listening and creating a safe command climate after a suicide. The guidance warns that survivors often experience guilt, anger and a desire to assign blame. Leaders are instructed to foster hope, reduce stigma and encourage open discussion of stressors affecting Marines.
The recordings have prompted a Marine Corps investigation, raising new questions about how leaders handled both the aftermath of Mobley’s death and broader concerns about command climate.
The Marine Corps has confirmed an investigation into the matter but has released few details. In a statement to The War Horse, Marine spokesman Capt. Michael Kennedy said the service remains committed to ensuring “every Marine feels supported and knows that help is always available.”
A Unit Already Reeling
Mobley’s death was not an isolated tragedy within the command.
His suicide was the third within Marine Corps Air Facility Quantico in less than two years. A senior enlisted Marine assigned to the facility died by suicide in August 2023, and another ARFF Marine took his own life several months later. A fourth ARFF Marine also died by suicide in February 2026.
Mobley, 22, had wanted to be a Marine since childhood. He even wrote about this dream as early as third grade. After graduating from boot camp in 2022, he eventually joined ARFF, a specialized aviation unit responsible for responding to aircraft emergencies. Friends and family described him as well-liked, dependable and deeply committed to the Corps.
His circumstances changed after suffering a broken leg and ACL tear during physical training in 2023. Surgery and complications left him on limited duty, preventing him from returning to the airfield. Instead, he was assigned to dispatch duty and spent months working long shifts away from many of the responsibilities he had enjoyed.
It is common for injured personnel to be treated as burdens rather than valued members of the unit. Several Marines specifically accused Master Sgt. Jerry Chapman III of regularly berating Mobley and other injured Marines.
Mobley was reportedly called into Chapman’s office almost daily and repeatedly criticized because he could not perform normal duties while recovering from his injuries. Another alleged that injured Marines were treated as though they had chosen to get hurt and that dispatch assignments were used as punishment.
The Meeting
Shortly after Mobley’s memorial service, Marines expected leadership to address concerns that had surfaced during the investigation.
Instead, First Sgt. Christopher Rushton and Col. Scott Warman spent more than two hours challenging criticism directed at the command. Marines reported that phones were collected before the meeting began.
Rushton repeatedly rejected suggestions that leadership played any role in Mobley’s death.
“You can’t sit here and tell me that ARFF was the reason that he did what he did,” Rushton told the Marines, according to The War Horse recording.
At another point, Rushton mocked concerns submitted by Marines during the investigation.
“Oh, master sergeant yelled at me. I’m sad. Boo-the-f***-hoo. You really think ISIS cares?” he said.
He also criticized their desire for more time with family, stating, “[Y]ou don’t want to switch shifts, because, ‘Oh, my wife’s schedule won’t allow it. Nobody gives a f*** about your wife’s schedule. Sorry if it hurts your feelings—maybe your feelings need to be hurt.”
The leaders also can be heard reading portions of statements Marines believed would remain confidential. Some of those statements criticized Chapman and described a pattern of hostility toward injured Marines and those seeking mental health care.
When one complaint requested a review of Chapman’s leadership, Rushton compared the criticism to mutiny.
“Know what that sounds like to me?” he asked. “Mutiny. It’s a f****** mutiny.”

