Times Colonist

Seven spectators injured as U.S. fighter jet crashes in Death Valley

-

LOS ANGELES — A U.S. Navy fighter jet crashed Wednesday in Death Valley National Park, injuring seven people who were at a scenic overlook where aviation enthusiast­s routinely watch military pilots speeding low through a chasm dubbed Star Wars Canyon, officials said.

The crash sent dark smoke billowing in the air, said Aaron Cassell, who was working at his family’s Panamint Springs Resort about 16 kilometres away and was the first to report the crash to park dispatch.

“I just saw a black mushroom cloud go up,” Cassell told the Associated Press. “Typically, you don’t see a mushroom cloud in the desert.”

A search was underway for the pilot of the single-seat F/A-18 Super Hornet that was on a routine training mission, said Lt. Cmdr. Lydia Bock, spokeswoma­n for Naval Air Station Lemoore in California’s Central Valley.

“The status of the pilot is unknown at this time,” Bock said about four hours after the crash.

A military helicopter searched for the pilot.

Ambulances were sent to the crash site near Father Crowley Overlook, but it wasn’t clear whether anyone was transporte­d for further medical treatment, said park spokesman Patrick Taylor. He said initial reports were that seven park visitors had minor injuries.

The lookout point about 260 kilometres north of Los Angeles is popular with photograph­ers and aviation buffs who gawk at jets flying training missions in the steep, narrow canyon.

U.S. and foreign militaries train pilots and test jets in the gorge officially called Rainbow Canyon near the park’s western entrance.

Training flights are almost a daily feature with jets screaming below the rim of the canyon and passing so close viewers can see the pilots’ facial expression­s.

Cassell said he heard jets roaring through the area and then saw the cloud of smoke.

“It looked like a bomb,” Cassell said. “To me that speaks of a very violent impact.”

A jet that was following the downed craft pulled up and began circling the area, Cassell said. He didn’t see any parachute.

His father drove up to the area after the crash and saw a large black scorch mark and shattered parts of the jet scattered throughout the area between the parking lot and lookout, Cassell said. A nose cone from the jet was the size of a bowling ball and the rest of the debris was no larger than a ball cap.

The jet was from strike fighter squadron VFA-151 stationed at Lemoore. The squadron is part of an air group attached to the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis.

The Super Hornet is a twinengine warplane designed to fly from aircraft carriers or ground bases on both air-superiorit­y and ground-attack missions.

 ??  ?? Photograph­ers aim their cameras and onlookers wave at a fast-approachin­g fighter jet in Death Valley, California, in March.
Photograph­ers aim their cameras and onlookers wave at a fast-approachin­g fighter jet in Death Valley, California, in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada