11 Troops Missing After Helicopter Crash In Florida
PENSACOLA,
Fla.
Seven Marines and four
soldiers were missing early Wednesday after an Army Blackhawk helicopter
crashed during a night training exercise out of Eglin Air Force Base in the
Florida Panhandle.
Base
officials said the Marines are part of a Camp Lejeune, North Carolina-based
special operations group and the soldiers were from a Hammond, Louisiana-based
National Guard unit.
The
helicopter was reported missing around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday and search and rescue
crews found debris from the crash around 2 a.m. Wednesday, Eglin spokesperson
Andy Bourland said.
"At
this time all are missing," Bourland said.
The
National Weather Service had issued a Dense Fog Advisory for the region where
the helicopter went down, but there was no early indication whether the fog had
any role in the crash. It was still foggy at dawn Wednesday, base officials
said.
CBS
News correspondent David Martin reports the aircraft went down over water.
The fog was the reason it
took several hours for search and rescue teams to locate debris, which had
washed ashore, Martin says.
The hunt for survivors was
being hampered by the fog and searchers faced the prospect of waiting for the
sun to burn off some of the fog, Martin adds.
Names of those involved
were being withheld pending notification of next of kin, Bourland said.
Bourland said the Army
helicopter took off from a nearby airport in Destin and joined other aircraft
in the training exercise.
He said a second Blackhawk
helicopter taking part had returned safely to the base and all on board were
accounted for.
The UH-60 helicopter went
down off a remote swath of beach between Pensacola and Destin, base officials
said.
The beach is owned by the
military and is used for test missions.
The training area includes
20 miles of pristine beachfront that has been under the control of the military
since before World War II. Military police keep a close watch on the area and
have been known to run off private vendors who rent jet skis or paddle boards
without permission.
Test
range manager Glenn Barndollar told The Associated Press in August that the
beach provides an ideal training area for special operations units from all
branches of the military to practice over the water, on the beach and in the
bay.
The
military sometimes drops trainees over the water using boats or helicopters and
the trainees must make their way onshore.
11 Troops Missing After Helicopter Crash In Florida
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