
Attorneys representing former U.S. Coast Guard Academy cadets filed seven more sexual assault complaints against the Coast Guard on Thursday, bringing to 29 the number of such complaints they’ve filed under the Federal Tort Claims Act.
The latest complaints were filed on behalf of women who allege they were sexually assaulted while they were cadets at the academy in New London or, in one case, while attending the Naval Academy Preparatory School, or NAPS, in Newport, R.I.
That cadet had been accepted to the Coast Guard Academy provided she first attend NAPS, according to court documents.
Sanford Heisler Sharp McKnight, the national law firm representing the former cadets, provided redacted copies of their complaints. According to the firm, several of the cadets were sexually assaulted in their dorm rooms by classmates who entered with the help of an academy policy that prohibited cadets from locking their doors.
One cadet woke up on several occasions during her tenure at the academy to find a drunk, naked male classmate lying on top of her, sexually assaulting her, the firm said. Another complaint details how a cadet was drugged while attending a party, accepted a ride home from fellow cadets and woke up the next morning having been raped.
Another was repeatedly sexually assaulted in a single night while staying at an academy lieutenant’s house with fellow cadets, the firm said.
“Additional Coast Guard Academy sexual assault survivors continue to reach out to me,” Christine Dunn, a Sanford Heisler attorney, said in a news release Thursday. “I’ve heard story after story of the sexual violence they endured at the academy and how the academy turned a blind eye. The Coast Guard can no longer be allowed to sweep sexual assault under the rug.”
The academy referred a request for comment to the Coast Guard’s media relations office, where a spokesman said the Coast Guard had yet to receive the latest claims. In any event, federal law would prevent it from discussing them, the spokesman said.
The Coast Guard will resolve these claims in accordance with the Federal Tort Claims Act and any other applicable law, he said.
Sanford Heisler filed Thursday’s tort claims as well as the 22 previous claims it filed last September and October against the Coast Guard; its parent agency, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security; and its former parent agency, the U.S. Department of Transportation. The claims, each of which seeks $10 million in damages, are believed to be the first collective action by sexual violence survivors against a U.S. service academy.
Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, or FTCA, an individual can bring legal claims against federal agencies for torts, or wrongful acts, committed by their employees. Before filing an FTCA complaint in court, an individual must first file an administrative complaint with the agency at fault. The agency has six months to investigate the claim.
The complaints against the Coast Guard have come in the wake of the service’s mishandling of “Operation Fouled Anchor,” its internal investigation of decades of sexual misconduct at the academy. CNN, the cable news network, revealed the existence of the report in 2023, prompting hearings and ongoing investigations by congressional panels.
Adm. Linda Fagan, the former Coast Guard commandant, was removed from her post in January, soon after President Donald Trump’s second inauguration, in part because of her handling of the “Operation Fouled Anchor” scandal.
© 2025 The Day (New London, Conn.). Visit www.theday.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
© Copyright 2025 The Day, New London, Conn.. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.