A Pentagon
official said all 11 service members were presumed dead and that the
Coast Guard found debris in the water. The official spoke to The
Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the official wasn't
authorized to speak on the record.
Human
remains had washed ashore, but crews still considered it a
search-and-rescue mission, said Sara Vidoni, a military spokeswoman for
Eglin Air Force Base, outside Pensacola.
The
helicopter — a UH-60 Black Hawk from the Army National Guard — was
reported missing around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, and crews found debris around
2 a.m., said Andy Bourland, a spokesman for Eglin Air Force Base,
outside Pensacola.
Much of
the area was enveloped in fog from Tuesday evening to Wednesday morning,
said Katie Moore with the National Weather Service in Tallahassee. Much
of that time, the visibility was at two miles or less, she said.
The fog created low visibility even as the sun came up, and the area was under a fog advisory.
Local law enforcement agencies
vehicles gathered Wednesday at the crash scene, near a remote swath of
beach between Pensacola and Destin. The beach is owned by the military,
and as part of the Eglin base, it is used for test missions.
From
the beach, search boats could be heard blasting horns as they combed
the water but could not be seen through the fog. The Coast Guard had
secured the waterways, Vidoni said.
Base
officials said the Marines were part of a Camp Lejeune, North
Carolina-based special operations group. The soldiers were from a
Hammond, Louisiana-based National Guard unit. Names of those involved
were not immediately released, pending notification of next of kin,
Bourland said.
Bourland said the Army helicopter took off from a nearby airport in Destin and joined other aircraft in the training exercise.
The
training area includes 20 miles of pristine beachfront that has been
under the control of the military since before World War II. Military
police keep a close watch on the area and have been known to run off
private vendors who rent jet skis or paddle boards without permission.
Test
range manager Glenn Barndollar told The AP in August that the beach
provides an ideal training area for special operations units from all
branches of the military to practice over the water, on the beach and in
the bay.
The military sometimes drops trainees over the water using boats or helicopters and the trainees must make their way onshore.
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