USA TODAY International Edition

Military plane crash kills at least 16 in Miss.

Most casualties are Marines, sheriff says

- Therese Apel Contributi­ng: Daniel Connolly, The ( Memphis) Commercial Appeal.

JACKSON, MISS. A military refueling aircraft crashed Monday afternoon in a soybean field in Leflore County, killing at least 16 and leaving a debris field 5 miles in radius, officials said.

Mississipp­i Emergency Management Agency Director Lee Smithson said the plane crashed on the Sunflower- Leflore county line.

Leflore County EMA Director Frank Randle confirmed that 16 are dead in the crash.

“Most of them are gonna be Marines,” said Sheriff Ricky Banks.

He could not confirm whether there were any civilians on the plane.

The Marine Corps Twitter account posted that “A USMC KC- 130 mishap occurred the evening of July 10.”

Marine Corps spokeswoma­n Lt. Kristine Rascicot confirmed that the plane that crashes was a USMC KC- 130 but said she was not able to release any details.

Capt. Sarah Burns said a Marine C- 130 “experience­d a mishap” Monday evening.

A KC- 130 aircraft is an extended- range tanker version of the Lockheed C- 130 Hercules that has been modified for aerial refueling.

The C- 130 Hercules is a fourengine turboprop aircraft used primarily for military transporta­tion. It’s a workhorse used in refueling, humanitari­an missions, firefighti­ng, search and rescue, and combat missions, according to Lockheed Martin.

It wasn’t clear Monday evening where the flight originated or where it was headed.

Leflore County deputy coroner Will Gnemi confirmed that his office was called to the accident scene.

He said investigat­ors were looking for other victims at the rural crash site, searching in a soybean field with tall vegetation.

Greenwood Fire Chief Marcus Banks told The Greenwood Commonweal­th that the call came in around 4 p. m.

An aircraft crash truck rushed to the scene, and 4,000 gallons of foam were used in an effort to put out the fire, he said.

Firefighte­rs were driven away by several “high- intensity explosions,” Banks said, adding that they thought it was possibly some ammunition igniting.

The Commonweal­th reported that the flight last contacted air traffic controller­s at an elevation of about 20,000 feet.

“Please join Deborah and me in praying for those hurting after this tragedy,” Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant said on Facebook.

“Our men and women in uniform risk themselves every day to secure our freedom.”

National Transporta­tion Safety Board spokesman Peter Knudson said the NTSB was not involved in the investigat­ion because the plane was a military aircraft.

 ?? ELIJAH BAYLIS, THE ( JACKSON, MISS.) CLARION- LEDGER ?? A helicopter flies over the smoking crash site of a military plane near Moorehead Road in Itta Bena, Miss., on Monday.
ELIJAH BAYLIS, THE ( JACKSON, MISS.) CLARION- LEDGER A helicopter flies over the smoking crash site of a military plane near Moorehead Road in Itta Bena, Miss., on Monday.

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