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Seriously. Did Vietnam era recruits not turn their rifles in at night?
Parris Island in '92 when I went through, your issued M16A2 was cable locked to the racks at night, both you and your rack mate had to know the combo for those two rifles. Each night the fire watch's duty was to check that all rifles were accounted for and locked coming on and going off post with their relief. Rifles were basically checked out of the armory in forming, and were cleaned and turned in a couple days before graduation, otherwise you didn't see the armory the whole time in boot camp unless you were marching past it for whatever reason. The same held true to when I worked the ranges there '96-'98.
As for ammo, that's one of those things you can easily come by if you wanted to, but it was far from easily accessible. All recruits were checked multiple times for ammo, every time you came off the line the coach checks that all rounds were expended, when leaving for the day recruits are searched by the Block NCO and had to make the verbal declaration "Recruit Schmuckatelly has no brass, trash, or saved rounds Sir!" (damn did I hear that line a LOT), then the drill instructors behind the range with a metal detector wand, then again by the hats when they get back to the squad bay. But, of course, if someone really wanted a round they could sneak one out, it's not like we were doing cavity searches there and even slipping one down the boot, where the eyelets set off a Garret wand anyhow, would work.
Going from memory here, not from any actual studies... Suicides at MCRD PI happen, same with MCRD SD, but they are typically hanging, jumping off the 3rd deck, or wrist slashing with their safety razor busted apart. The vast majority are attempts that are thwarted, in my two years at PI there seemed to be an attempt once or twice a month, one rare week a company at the ranges had two attempts and one successful in a week. But the shootings are usually more visible because they are successful. The only suicide by gunfire I remember in my two years there was one young man shot himself in the head on the firing line on the range next door to mine, all because he had just gone "UNQ" and being the star athlete his whole life until he picked up a rifle left him with little ability to deal with failure. He used a fellow recruit's rifle to do it, that guy on the firing line and the loop sling was still attached to his arm. Sad, really, but I talked to the young man and future grunt who's rifle he used the next day, gauging if he was going to be okay after catching a pink mist the day before, his response was "Fuck that POG, he went down like a bitch and I didn't like him anyhow." He went on to reshoot his 500yd stage, damn near cleaned it, and I'm sure he turned out just fine.
They also are at the ranges at about two months into training, kind of the witching hour for getting "Dear John" or "Bro, hate to tell you but your old lady is whoring all over town" letters, I can only imagine how bad it is these days when the girlfriends are really used to continuous communications and has probably never sent a letter in their life until their "Bae" flew off to become a man, instead signing up on Tinder and personifying good ol' Mary Jane Rotten-Crotch to the best of their abilities. Fucking sluts.
Enough of my ramblings, I have work to do...