The Black Hawk helicopter crash is now making headlines all over the news grabbing viewers’ attention and raising concerns about injuries and death count.
According to the U.S. Army on Thursday in one of the military’s bloodiest training mishaps in recent years, two medical evacuation Black Hawk helicopters crashed while on a routine nighttime training operation over Kentucky.
According to him, the US Army would send a team from Alabama to investigate the black hawk helicopter crash on Thursday.
The military of the United States and many other nations utilize the adaptable HH-60 Black Hawk helicopter regularly.
The Black Hawk was created to satisfy the Army’s need for a medium-lift, multi-mission helicopter that could function in a range of settings and circumstances.
Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation created the HH-60 Black Hawk in the 1970s, and the U.S. Army began using it in service in 1979. Since then, the helicopter has been employed in a variety of tasks, such as medical evacuation, troop transport, and special operations, as well as combat search and rescue.
Two Tennessee National Guard pilots were murdered last month during a training exercise when their Black Hawk chopper crashed along an Alabama roadway.
Black Hawk Helicopter Crash: Nine Soldiers Killed
Two HH-60 Black Hawk helicopters from the Army’s 101st Airborne Division were being flown by crew members using night vision goggles when the aircraft crashed in a field above Trigg County, Kentucky, late on Wednesday.
Five people were aboard one HH-60 helicopter, while four people were aboard the other. The pilots, co-pilots, crew chiefs, and doctors were all killed.
As of now, little is known about the causes of the black hawk helicopter crash. Army Brigadier General John Lubas confessed he was not even sure if the helicopters collided.
According to a military official, two Army Black Hawk helicopters crashed in Kentucky, killing nine people.
As per Nondice Thurman, a Fort Campbell spokesman, the fatalities occurred the previous evening in southwest Kentucky during a regular training mission.
From Fort Campbell’s statement, two HH-60 Black Hawk helicopters from the 101st Airborne Division crashed in Trigg County, Kentucky, at approximately 10 p.m. on Wednesday.
The collision, which occurred 48 kilometers (30 miles) northwest of Fort Campbell, was verified by the 101st Airborne.
Andy Beshear, the governor of Kentucky, had earlier stated that deaths were anticipated and that police and emergency personnel were responding.
Black Hawk Case Update
The Black Hawk helicopter crash happened in Cadiz, a hamlet in Trigg County, Kentucky, which is 60 miles (97 kilometers) northwest of Nashville and close to the Tennessee border.
A mile or so from the scene of the collision, Nick Tomaszewski claims he saw two helicopters fly over his house just before it happened. Fortunately, there have been no complaints of home damage yet.
As per the eyewitness, the two helicopters appear low and like they’re sort of near to one another, which he commented to his wife as the pair were sitting there last night, staring out into the back deck.
Helicopters frequently fly low but not too close together during flyovers for training drills.
On Thursday morning, the Kentucky Senate members observed a minute of silence in memory of the victims of the accident.
Senate President Robert Stivers said to the somber chamber that he does not know the magnitude of what has gone on, but Robert believes it is serious and there has been a large loss of life in our military.
According to Lubas, an aircraft safety team from Alabama that the Army sent will arrive later on Thursday and launch an inquiry into what caused the incident.
Furthermore, Lubas noted that there is something like a black box on board that can provide more information about the crash, and he expressed hope that investigators will be able to extract data from onboard systems.