Why does that change the process of adjudicating an offense? Does the fact that it's in the media make it service discrediting? I don't know, frankly, but you still start at step one of the process. This isn't a murder case.
When you first mentioned Chief involvement, I wasn't thinking DRB. Makes more sense now.
So is there a threshold for something to be a discredit to the service? Or is it one of those, "I know it when I see it" things? Technically, I'd argue that a DUI is a discredit. And is there an additional article for discredit?
I'm not advocating kicking her out of the Navy or even reduction in rank, assuming she doesn't have a history and doesn't continue down this path. But the fact that her single act (basically Article 92) also made it to the national media makes the offense slightly more...offensive.