San Diego Union-Tribune

911 CALL SHOWS BIZARRE CIRCUMSTAN­CES OF EJECTION

‘I’m not sure where the airplane is,’ says pilot of F-35 fighter

- BY JAMES POLLARD & TARA COPP NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. Pollard and Copp write for The Associated Press.

A military pilot whose advanced fighter jet went temporaril­y missing over the weekend is heard repeatedly requesting an ambulance in a perplexing 911 call from the South Carolina home where he had parachuted to safety, according to an audio recording released Thursday to The Associated Press.

The four-minute recording captures the bizarre circumstan­ces for the three unidentifi­ed people involved: a North Charleston resident calmly explaining that a pilot just parachuted into his backyard, the pilot who doesn’t know what became of his F-35 jet, and a puzzled

dispatcher trying to make sense of it all.

“We got a pilot in the house, and I guess he landed in my backyard, and we’re trying to see if we could get an ambulance to the house, please,” the resident said.

The pilot, who said he was 47, reported feeling “OK” after falling what he estimated was 2,000 feet. Only his back hurt, he said. The resident said the pilot looked fine.

“Ma’am, a military jet

crashed. I’m the pilot. We need to get rescue rolling,” the pilot said. “I’m not sure where the airplane is. It would have crash landed somewhere. I ejected.”

Later in the call, he made another plea for medical help.

“Ma’am, I’m a pilot in a military aircraft, and I ejected. So I just rode a parachute down to the ground. Can you please send an ambulance?” the pilot said.

The Marines have described the pilot as an experience­d aviator with decades of experience in the cockpit.

The F-35 crashed Sunday after a malfunctio­n prompted the pilot to eject over Charleston and land in the residentia­l backyard not far from Charleston Internatio­nal Airport.

The fighter jet, which the Marine Corps said was at an altitude of only about 1,000 feet, kept flying for 60 miles until it crashed in a rural area near Indiantown. It took more than a day to locate the wreckage.

In a separate eight-minute dispatch call released Thursday to the AP, an unidentifi­ed official tried explaining that they had “a pilot with his parachute” but no informatio­n about what happened to his plane or word of a crash. He said “the pilot lost sight of it on his way down due to the weather.”

The official also recalled hearing a “rather loud noise” about 25 minutes prior that “sounded something like a tornado, possibly a plane.”

The Marine Corps said Thursday that a feature on fighter jets intended to protect pilots in emergencie­s could explain how the F-35 managed to continue its travels. They said that while it was unclear why the jet kept flying, flight control software would have worked to keep it steady if there were no longer a pilot’s hands on the controls.

“If the jet is stable in level flight, the jet will attempt to stay there. If it was in an establishe­d climb or descent, the jet will maintain a 1G state in that climb or descent until commanded to do something else,” the Marine Corps said in a statement. “This is designed to save our pilots if they are incapacita­ted or lose situationa­l awareness.”

Other questions about the crash remained, notably why the plane wasn’t tracked as it continued flying over South Carolina and how it could take more than a day to find a fighter jet that had flown over populated, although rural, areas.

The Marines said features that erase a jet’s secure communicat­ions in case of an ejection — a feature designed to protect both the pilot’s location and the plane’s classified systems — may also have complicate­d efforts to find it.

The plane would have kept broadcasti­ng an identifier on an open channel to identify itself as friend or foe — but even on an unclassifi­ed communicat­ions channel air traffic control may not have been able to pick up the signal depending on how powerful its radar was, the weather at the time, how high the plane was flying and the terrain, the Marines said.

 ?? SUHAIMI ABDULLAH AP FILE ?? A Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II takes part in an aerial display in Singapore last year.
SUHAIMI ABDULLAH AP FILE A Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II takes part in an aerial display in Singapore last year.

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