Penticton Herald

Crashed cargo plane among oldest flying

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PORT WENTWORTH, Ga. — Military investigat­ors began the arduous task Thursday of answering why a C-130 Hercules cargo plane being flown into retirement by an experience­d crew plunged onto a Georgia highway.

Families and friends of nine crew, meanwhile, grieved and took note of the fact Puerto Rico’s planes are the oldest in the National Guard inventory.

There were no survivors when the huge plane dropped from the sky moments after taking off from Savannah, Georgia, narrowly missing motorists and buildings as fiery wreckage exploded over a wide area. Only the tail section was intact, sitting improbably in the middle of Georgia Highway 21.

A military officer told reporters Thursday that investigat­ors were on the scene.

“It’s extremely important for us to understand what has happened,” said Col. Pete Boone, vice commander of the 165th Airlift Wing of the Georgia Air National Guard. He said investigat­ors would use “every resource at our disposal to properly identify a cause.”

The aging plane had rescued and resupplied American citizens after last year’s hurricanes as part of the U.S. territory’s fleet, which often struggles to remain mission-ready amid long waits for spare parts, said Adjutant Gen. Isabelo Rivera, commander of the Puerto Rico National Guard.

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