Marine lance corporal reportedly killed by gun discharge in truck in California

A 20-year-old U.S. Marine was killed during an active-duty training exercise in California when a gun reportedly discharged in a truck filled with other service members.

Lance Cpl. Jackson J. Forringer, with the 2nd Marine Regiment based in Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, died on April 20 "while conducting training during Integrated Training Exercise 3-23 at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms, California," 2nd Lt. Olivia Giarrizzo, a spokesperson for the 2nd Marine Division, said in an email to Fox News Digital on Wednesday.

"The incident is currently under investigation by NCIS. No other injuries were reported," Giarrizzo added.

The spokesperson cited an active investigation by the NCIS (Naval Criminal Investigative Service) and declined to go into further detail.

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Marine veteran Trey Smith-Tatham, who previously served with Forringer, said Forringer was killed "by an inadvertent gun discharge while he was with other Marines in the back of a Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement, or 7-ton truck," according to Corps Marine Times.

Smith-Tatham, 21, told the outlet that Forringer, an infantryman, arrived with his unit in Twentynine Palms for pre-deployment training in late March.

Smith-Tatham, who said he was discharged in 2022 due to drug use but kept in touch with members of his former unit daily, told the outlet he learned that Marines from Forringer’s platoon had been ordered into the back of the truck. He said they had been told to set their service rifles at "condition one," meaning with a loaded magazine and a round in the chamber.

It's unclear how Forringer was shot, but Smith-Tatham said he believes someone in the vehicle, which was not moving at the time, had their weapon's safety off.

Smith-Tatham said he lost a close friend, Pfc. Zachary Riffle, who was killed along with a second Marine in a seven-ton truck rollover at Camp Lejeune in January 2022, and he recalled Forringer as a friendly and positive person who invited him along on gym workouts after Riffle's passing to show moral support.

"He was just a really good dude," Smith-Tatham said of Forringer.

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Forringer died just weeks after three Camp Lejeune Marines were injured in a separate all-terrain vehicle crash at Twentynine Palms.

The Marine who had been driving the vehicle during the rollover crash that killed Riffle was acquitted on charges that included manslaughter and negligent homicide earlier this month.

"It’s hard to be this age and lose as many friends as we have when we all joined when we were, like, 19 years old," Smith-Tatham said. "We shouldn’t be losing friends this young without any clarity or reason behind it."

Forringer, of Chesnee, South Carolina, was honored in an obituary shared online by his parents, saying he "met Jesus" in an "active-duty training" at Twentynine Palms.

"Born April 9, 2003 in Anderson, SC. he was a son of Todd A. Forringer and Andrea L. Forringer of Chesnee, SC. Jackson was a 2021 graduate of Chesnee High School and was actively serving in the United States Marine Corps, a lifelong dream. He never met a stranger and was one of the humblest, kind-spirited individuals you could meet. He loved to give back and help others," the obituary shared on the Harris-Nadeau Mortuary website reads. "Jackson loved his family and his friends unconditionally and had an extra special bond with his cousin Kate."

In May 2021, the family was featured in a Mother's Day piece by the Spartanburg Herald-Journal celebrating Forringer's formal adoption narrowly made official before his 18th birthday. Jackson Forringer had come to live with the family as a teenager after having entered the foster care system at age 5 and having lived in nearly two dozen other homes.

"Jackson was just part of the family from day one," Todd Forringer told the paper at the time.

Former Arkansas state senator, nephew of Asa Hutchinson, sentenced in bribery scheme

A former Arkansas state senator, who is the nephew of the state's former governor turned 2024 presidential candidate Asa Hutchinson, was sentenced to more than four years in prison Tuesday for his role in a bribery scheme. 

Jeremy Hutchinson, 48, pleaded guilty in 2019 to filing a false tax return, conspiracy to commit federal program bribery, and conspiracy to commit federal program bribery. He was sentenced Feb. 3 to three years and 10 months in prison on two of the charges. 

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Hutchinson is one of five former state lawmakers convicted after a federal Medicaid fraud investigation, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported. His conviction stems from his work at Preferred Family Healthcare Inc. of Missouri. While being paid by PFH as outside counsel and as a state senator, he would hold up agency budgets and act on legislation, the Justice Department said. 

Between 2014 and 2017, Hutchinson received $350,000 in monthly retainer payments from the company. 

In 2022, PFH agreed to pay $8 million in forfeiture and restitution to the federal government and Arkansas as part of a non-prosecution agreement. Six former officers of the company and a political consultant also pleaded guilty to charges related to the alleged bribery scheme.

Even as his nephew faces prison time, Asa Hutchinson has moved forward with his plans to gain the GOP nomination for president. 

"In this campaign for president, I stand alone in terms of my experience, record, and leadership," Asa Hutchinson said in prepared remarks shared with Fox News Digital. "From Congress to DEA to Homeland Security, I have served our country in times of crisis. As governor of Arkansas, we cut taxes and created record surpluses."