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Army
helicopters collided near Alaska mountain pass,
report
says
By Becky Bohrer,
The Associated Press
On April 12, 2023, 1st Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment, prepares to leave Ladd Army Airfield at Fort Wainwright to conduct aerial gunnery training. (Eve Baker/Army)
JUNEAU, Alaska — A U.S. Army
helicopter that was flying through a mountain pass in Alaska along with other
aircraft returning from a training exercise earlier this year hit one of the other helicopters,
causing both to crash and killing three soldiers, a military
investigation report released Friday said.
The
accident safety report from the United States Army Combat Readiness Center is
among the documents related to the April 27 crash near Healy, Alaska, that were
released in response to a records request from The Associated Press. An
analysis of the crash and findings and recommendations were redacted.
At
the time of the crash, the Army said the two helicopters from the 1st Attack
Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment at Fort Wainwright, near Fairbanks, collided
about 50 miles (80 kilometers) east of Healy when they were returning from
training. Healy is about 80 miles (129 kilometers) southwest of Fairbanks.
The
documents provide some new details. The helicopters were among 14 aircraft that
were flying from Donnelly Training Area to Fort Wainwright on a route that
included passing through a mountainous area, said the report released Friday.
About
48 minutes into the trip, the flight lead took a planned right turn into a
mountain pass, the report said. “As the flight of 14 aircraft entered the
mountain pass, aircraft in the flight began to decelerate,” the report said.
About 30 seconds after making the turn, one of the helicopters hit another and
both crashed, the report said. Both aircraft were destroyed.
The Army has identified the
soldiers who died as Warrant Officer 1 Stewart Duane Wayment,
32, of North Logan, Utah; Chief Warrant Officer 3 Christopher Robert Eramo, 39,
of Oneonta, New York; and Chief Warrant Officer 2 Kyle D. McKenna, 28, of
Colorado Springs, Colorado. A fourth soldier was injured. That person’s name
has not been released. There were two soldiers on each AH-64D Apache
helicopter.
The
aircraft require two crewmembers for flight, said Jimmie E. Cummings, Jr.,
director of communication and public affairs with the U.S. Army Combat
Readiness Center.
Following
the crash, which occurred a month after nine soldiers were killed when
two Army Black Hawk medical evacuation helicopters crashed during a nighttime
training exercise in Kentucky, the Army temporarily grounded aviation units for
training.
In
February, a Black Hawk helicopter from the Tennessee National Guard crashed
in Alabama during a flight-training mission, killing two crew
members. Also that month, two soldiers were injured when
an Army helicopter was involved in a rollover accident in Alaska.
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