Boston Herald

Still no sign of Army helicopter crew in Hawaii

Black Hawk had no life raft

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HONOLULU — All five crew members aboard a Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into the Pacific had life vests and an air bottle for underwater breathing, but Army officials and rescuers searching the turbulent waters off Hawaii for days had not seen signs of life as of late Friday.

Crews of Black Hawk helicopter­s undergo underwater crash and survival training before they come to Hawaii, said Master Sgt. Peter Mayes, a spokesman for the 25th Infantry Division. Soldiers simulate being on board a helicopter that’s crashed into the water and learn how to free themselves.

Mayes said there was no life raft on board the helicopter because operating procedure only calls for rafts when non-crew member soldiers or people without life vests are on board.

Army officials have spent days sifting through chunks of helicopter debris since the aircraft crashed during nighttime training Tuesday.

The U.S. Coast Guard said Friday it is searching up to 50 miles off the remote point where the UH-60 helicopter crashed west of Oahu.

Firefighte­rs found and collected what appeared to be pieces of helicopter fuselage and a helmet earlier in the week. The Coast Guard said responders continue to find debris, but didn’t have specifics on what kind.

The Navy brought remotely operated underwater vehicles and sonar to help. On Friday, they searched waters about 1 mile off the coast, said Lt. Col. Curtis Kellogg, a spokesman for the Army’s 25th Infantry Division.

Shifting waters and swift currents spread debris from 2 miles off shore on Tuesday night to an expanded search area of at least 50 miles on Thursday.

The ocean floor drops quickly off Oahu and varies throughout the search area. It is over 1,000 feet deep at the center of a safety zone establishe­d by the Coast Guard for the search.

The safety zone extends from a 5-mile radius around the last known location of the helicopter. The Coast Guard set it up because it’s likely to have a higher concentrat­ion of debris and be where most of the search aircraft and vessels are operating.

A Coast Guard HC-130 plane helping with the search was using radar that’s designed to search the surface of the ocean, said spokeswoma­n Chief Petty Officer Sara Muir. An MH-65 helicopter was using infrared technology, she said.

The two Black Hawk crews were conducting training between Kaena Point and Dillingham Airfield when communicat­ions were lost.

The two helicopter­s are part of the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade based in Hawaii.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? PICKING UP PIECES: Hawaii water safety officials move debris from the downed UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter that went down offshore on Tuesday. Army, Navy and Coast Guard search teams continue the search for the crew.
AP PHOTO PICKING UP PIECES: Hawaii water safety officials move debris from the downed UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter that went down offshore on Tuesday. Army, Navy and Coast Guard search teams continue the search for the crew.

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