Lodi News-Sentinel

Pilot error blamed for fatal U2 spy plane crash

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SAN FRANCISCO — A mistake by a pilot on his first flight in a U2 spy plane forced him and an instructor to eject from the plane while on a training mission from a California base in September, killing the instructor after his seat hit the plane’s right wing, the Air Force said Wednesday.

Investigat­ors determined that the pilot who was training to fly U2 spy planes either pulled back too fast or too quickly on his stick while learning to recover from a stall shortly after the plane left from Beale Air Force Base about 50 miles north of Sacramento, Air Force Major A.J. Schrag said.

“He probably got a little overenthus­iastic,” Schrag said.

That caused the plane to go into a secondary stall that forced the student pilot and his instructor, Lt. Col. Ira S. Eadie, to eject before the plane turned upside down. The $32 million plane crashed near Sutter, California.

Eadie suffered fatal injuries when his seat struck the plane’s right wing, investigat­ors found. The student pilot also suffered injuries, though he has since recovered and completed his training to fly U2 spy planes, Schrag said.

Schrag said privacy laws did not allow the Air Force to disclose the student pilot’s name.

He was on the first of three “acceptance flights” that are part of the process of interviewi­ng to be a U2 pilot, the Air Force said.

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