The Columbus Dispatch

Blimp limp after police gunfire deflates it

- By Michael Rubinkam ASSOCIATED PRESS

MUNCY, Pa. — State police used shotguns on Thursday to deflate a wayward military surveillan­ce blimp that broke loose in Maryland and floated for hours before coming down into trees in the Pennsylvan­ia countrysid­e.

Curious residents trickled into a staging area as the military began gathering up about 6,000 feet of tether, as well as the blimp’s huge hull and a smaller tail piece, a process expected to take at least through today.

The white behemoth still had helium in its nose when it went down in a steep ravine on Wednesday afternoon, and the “easiest way possible” to drain the gas was to shoot it, Villa said. State police troopers peppered the blimp with about 100 shots.

The slow-moving, unmanned Army surveillan­ce blimp broke loose from its mooring at Aberdeen Proving Ground and then floated over Pennsylvan­ia, causing thousands of electrical outages as its dangling tether took out power lines.

The 240-foot helium-filled blimp, which had two fighter jets on its tail, came down near Muncy, a small town about 80 miles north of Harrisburg, the state capital. No injuries were reported.

Very sensitive electronic­s onboard have been removed, Villa said. The military is considerin­g using helicopter­s to ferry the wreckage from the site, he said.

He said it was unknown how the blimp broke loose, and an investigat­ion was underway.

Kay Houseknech­t looked out her family-room window on Wednesday afternoon and saw the blimp in the woods behind her house, “flapping in the trees.” She said on Thursday that she hopes the military figures out what went wrong.

“What a waste,” Houseknech­t said. “What a waste.”

Michael Negard, spokesman for the Army Combat Readiness Center, said a two-person accident-investigat­ion team was heading to the site.

People gawked in wonder and disbelief on Wednesday as the blimp floated silently over the sparsely populated area.

Ken Hunter, an outdoors writer and wildlife illustrato­r, was working from home when he got a call from his wife that a blimp was coming down nearby.

He drove up the road a short distance and, sure enough, there was the tail section hanging from a tree, looking to him like a big white sheet. He took some pictures before state police closed the road.

 ?? KEN HUNTER VIA AP ?? The remains of the unmanned Army surveillan­ce blimp hang in trees where it crash-landed.
KEN HUNTER VIA AP The remains of the unmanned Army surveillan­ce blimp hang in trees where it crash-landed.

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