El Dorado News-Times

Search halted for missing Marines

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SAN DIEGO — Eight Marines missing after their landing craft sank off the Southern California coast during a training exercise are presumed dead, the Marine Corps announced Sunday.

The Marines said they had called off the search that started late Thursday afternoon when the amphibious assault vehicle sank with 15 Marines and one Navy sailor aboard. Eight Marines were rescued, but one later died and two are in critical condition.

The 26-ton, tank-like craft took on water and quickly sank in hundreds of feet of water — too deep for divers — making it difficult to reach.

‘It is with as heavy heart that I decided to conclude the search and rescue effort,' said Col. Christophe­r Bronzi, commander of the 15th Marine Expedition­ary Unit.

All of the Marines aboard were attached to the 15th Marine Expedition­ary Unit, based at nearby Camp Pendleton, north of San Diego. They ranged in age from 19 to early 30s and all were wearing combat gear, including body armor and flotation vests, according to Lt. Gen. Joseph Osterman, commanding general of the 1st Marine Expedition­ary Force.

The craft was one of 13 amphibious assault vehicles that had just completed an exercise. It was heading back to a Navy ship when it began taking on water about a half-mile from the Navy-owned island off San Diego.

Troops on board two other amphibious assault vehicles responded quickly but couldn't stop the sinking, Osterman said at a Friday news conference.

Over the course of the search, dozens of helicopter­s and ships searched more than 1,000 square nautical miles of sea.

Efforts will now turn to finding and recovering the service members and investigat­ing the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the sinking, officials said.

The names of the victims will be released 24 hours after their families are notified.

The vehicles have been used since 1972, and continuall­y refurbishe­d.

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