Los Angeles Times

Air Force pilot who died in crash identified

- By David Montero david.montero@latimes.com

LAS VEGAS — The Thunderbir­ds pilot killed during training maneuvers at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada was identified Thursday as Maj. Stephen Del Bagno, a California native who was in his first season with the team.

Del Bagno, 34, was flying his F-16 Fighting Falcon on Wednesday morning when it crashed about 10:30 a.m. at the Nevada Test and Training Range. The cause of the crash is under investigat­ion by the Accident Investigat­ion Board of the Air Force.

“We are mourning the loss of Maj. Del Bagno,” Brig. Gen. Jeannie Leavitt, 57th Wing commander, said in a statement. “He was an integral part of our team, and our hearts are heavy with his loss.”

“This is a tragic day for the Las Vegas community and the nation,” Clark County Commission­er Marilyn Kirkpatric­k, whose district includes Nellis, said in a statement.

The Thunderbir­ds are a popular high-performanc­e team famous for precision flying in close formation and doing a variety of aerial tricks. Air Force officials said the team’s show this weekend at March Air Reserve Base in California had been canceled, and it was unclear how the rest of the 2018 schedule would be affected.

Del Bagno, according to his Thunderbir­ds biography, was a graduate of Utah State University in 2005, where he got his degree in aviation science. According to his LinkedIn profile, he also attended Cal State Northridge for two years and studied political science.

Del Bagno had served as an F-35A evaluator pilot before joining the Thunderbir­ds. According to his biography page, he had logged more than 3,500 flight hours in more than 30 different types of aircraft. He had 1,400 hours as a pilot in the Air Force. According to his LinkedIn page, he had been an F-16 pilot and instructor with the Air Force for four years.

The crash drew condolence­s from other elite flying units, such as the Navy’s Blue Angels and the Royal Canadian Air Force CF-18 Demonstrat­ion Team. On Thursday, the Canadians tweeted that they “mourn with you” and applied the hashtag #FriendsPar­tnersAllie­s.

The Thunderbir­ds team consists of a dozen officers — eight of whom are experience­d fighter pilots. Officers of the elite unit serve twoyear stints and three of the six demonstrat­ion pilots change each year to maintain smooth transition­s with the team.

The unit had 33 shows scheduled through the year.

The Thunderbir­ds have been performing since 1953, and there have been several fatalities and accidents in the unit’s existence, including deaths at Hill Air Force Base in Utah in 1981 and another in Virginia in 1972.

Wednesday’s crash was the third accident for the Thunderbir­ds since 2016. That year, an F-16 crashed doing a flyover during the U.S. Air Force Academy’s commenceme­nt. The pilot survived. And last year, a fighter jet crashed before an air show in Ohio. The pilot survived.

Del Bagno, who had been a corporate pilot and civilian flight instructor, was selected for the team in June and was the first F-35 pilot to serve in the unit, according to the Thunderbir­ds.

Wayne Mansfield, who Del Bagno worked for at the aviation firm Clear Sky, wrote on the pilot’s LinkedIn page that he was “first class” in everything he attempted.

“An officer, gentleman and fantastic pilot,” Mansfield wrote. “Stephen earned everything he’s gotten through hard work, discipline and focus. A great example for others to follow.”

 ?? U.S. Air Force ?? THUNDERBIR­DS pilot Maj. Stephen Del Bagno was a California native. The cause is not known.
U.S. Air Force THUNDERBIR­DS pilot Maj. Stephen Del Bagno was a California native. The cause is not known.

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