Thousands of Navy SEALs and service members negatively impacted by President Joe Biden‘s COVID-19 vaccine mandate scored a major win in court after a years-long legal battle.
The mandate enacted in August 2021 led to the forced firing of over 8,000 service members who refused the shot on religious or medical grounds.
Navy SEALs and other special operators suffered professional setbacks for refusing the vaccine, despite having their religious accommodation requests denied multiple times.
They were fired, denied trainings to advance in rank and, in some cases, even forced by the military to repay their initial signing bonuses between $4,000 and $7,000.
SEALs and other special operations warfare troops were also told they would have to pay back the cost of their training by the federal government – hundreds of thousands of dollars – and hand over their hard-earned ‘Trident’ pin.
According to the settlement first obtained by DailyMail.com, service members who quit the Navy after being ‘mistreated’ will have their records corrected.
Navy SEALs and other special operators suffered professional setbacks for refusing the vaccine, despite having their religious accommodation requests denied multiple times
In addition, the Navy also ‘agreed to post a statement affirming the Navy’s respect for religious service members.’
The military will provide ‘more training’ for the actual commanders who review religious accommodation requests as well as change their policy.
Lastly, the government will pay $1.5 million in attorneys’ fees that accumulated over nearly four years of litigation.
‘This has been a long and difficult journey, but the Navy SEALs never gave up,’ Danielle Runyan, senior counsel at First Liberty Institute told DailyMail.com.
‘We are thrilled that those members of the Navy who were guided by their conscience and steadfast in their faith will not be penalized in their Navy careers.’
First Liberty and Hacker Stephens LLP secured the settlement on behalf of the troops that was accepted by the United States District Court Northern District of Texas Fort Worth Division on Wednesday.
Heather Gebelin Hacker added that it is a ‘hard-fought but significant victory.’
A spokesperson for the Navy referred DailyMail.com to the Department of Justice for comment which did not immediately respond.
Earlier this year, over 200 active duty and retired service members vowed to hold the Biden administration accountable for ‘trampling’ on their rights by enforcing the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
Over 200 service members declared that they will do ‘everything’ in their power to get accountability since not a single leader has resigned or been held to account despite the rollback of the vaccine mandate last year.
The mandate enacted in August 2021 led to the forced firing of over 8,000 service members who refused the shot on religious or medical grounds
On New Year’s Day, over 200 service members declared that they will do ‘everything’ in their power to get accountability since not a single leader has resigned or been held to account despite the rollback of the vaccine mandate
In a letter obtained by DailyMail.com, the current and former troops accuse Biden’s military brass of ‘continuing to ignore’ their pleas to correct the ‘injuries and laws that were broken.’
They are threatening to even force Biden’s top leaders to be brought out of retirement so they can be court-martialed and held to account.
‘While implementing the COVID-19 vaccine mandate, military leaders broke the law, trampled constitutional rights, denied informed consent, permitted unwilling medical experimentation, and suppressed the free exercise of religion,’ the letter states.
It goes on to say both service members and their families were ‘significantly harmed’ and their ‘suffering continues to be felt financially, emotionally, and physically.’
‘Some service members became part of our ever-growing veteran homeless population, some developed debilitating vaccine injuries, and some even lost their lives,’ the letter continues.
The mandate was eventually rescinded in the December 2022 defense authorization bill, but it did not reinstate service members who were fired for not receiving the shot nor provide any other compensation.
In the open letter, they explicitly name now-retired and still serving top commanders that they are demanding accountability from.
Those include the former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley who exited the military in October and Gen. James McConville who served as the 40th chief of staff of the Army until 2023.
‘These individuals enabled lawlessness and the unwilling experimentation on service members,’ they state.
‘The moral and physical injuries they helped inflict are significant. They betrayed the trust of service members and the American people. Their actions caused irreparable harm to the Armed Forces and the institutions for which we have fought and bled.’
They have ‘refused to resign’ or take any accountability for their actions, the service members state.
The letter goes on to mutually pledge to hold them to account through ‘lawful word and action.’
The Army recently was under scrutiny for attempting to win back favor with soldiers who were fired after declining the COVID-19 vaccine for religious or medical reasons, offering a ‘correction of military records.’
A Navy SEAL instructor assists students from Basic Underwater Demolition/SEA
The letter sparked an outcry of fury at the Defense Department by lawmakers and former service members
But the letter sparked an outcry of fury at the Defense Department by lawmakers and current and former service members who said there was always a process in place to do just that.
Since the mandate, Army has also faced a huge shortage of recruits in fiscal year 2022 at 55,000 – which was 10,000 short of its target for the year.
Congress is also working to further remedy the wrongs that these service members faced, but many soldiers have told DailyMail.com that it is just the start.
In the most recent National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which passed a year later in December 2023, there is a provision allowing former service members who were fired to change their discharge status.
But some current and former troops are saying that the amendments in the FY 2024 NDAA are not strong enough to undo the ‘serious harassment’ they endured over the last two years.
John Frankman, who was in the Special Forces as part of the Green Berets, said that the ‘missed career opportunities’ he endured over the last two years could never be undone by any action of Congress.
Another active-duty Army officer previously told DailyMail.com that the fired troops have had ‘their lives turned upside down and were betrayed by those charged with protecting them.’
And a formal apology from their service branches would be key to be able to have trust restored, he added.