Las Vegas Review-Journal

Marine crash worst since ’05

All 16 on transport plane killed; foul play isn’t suspected

- By Rogelio V. Solis and Emily Wagster Pettus The Associated Press

ITTA BENA, Miss. — Investigat­ors picked through debris across a fire-blackened soybean field Tuesday to try to determine why a U.S. military plane slammed into the ground, killing all 16 people aboard in the deadliest Marine crash anywhere in more than a decade.

The KC-130 air tanker was carrying members of an elite Marine special operations unit cross-country for training in Arizona when it went down Monday afternoon in the Mississipp­i Delta, the military said. The fiery crash scattered wreckage for miles.

Witnesses said they heard low, rumbling explosions when the plane was still high in the sky, saw the aircraft spiraling toward the flat, green landscape and spotted an apparently empty parachute floating toward the earth.

Fifteen Marines and a Navy sailor were killed. Their identities were not immediatel­y released.

The crash happened outside the small town of Itta Bena, about 85 miles north of Jackson. Bodies were found more than a mile from the plane.

It was the deadliest Marine Corps air disaster since 2005, when a transport helicopter went down during a sandstorm in Iraq, killing 30 Marines and a sailor.

The Marine Corps said the cause was under investigat­ion and offered no informatio­n on whether the plane issued a distress call.

FBI agents joined military investigat­ors, though Marine Maj. Andrew Aranda told reporters that no foul play was suspected.

“They are looking at the debris and will be collecting informatio­n off of that to figure out what happened,” Aranda said.

The KC-130 is used to refuel aircraft in flight and transport cargo and troops.

The plane was based at Stewart Air National Guard Base in Newburgh, New York, and officials said some of those killed were from the base.

Six of the Marines and the sailor were from an elite Marine Raider battalion at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, the Marine Corps said. It said the seven and their equipment were headed for pre-deployment training at Yuma, Arizona.

Will Nobile, a catfish farmer, said he was inside his office Monday afternoon when he heard an unusually loud rumble.

“It sounded like a big thundersto­rm,” Nobile said. “Not one big explosion, but a couple of second-long explosions. … A long, steady rumble is what it was.”

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