Rescuers end ocean search for Navy fighter pilot
The Navy verbally expressed Saturday that it surmises the pilot is dead after failing to find him during a 36-hour search. The Navy declined to relinquish the pilot's name pending notification of his family. The Navy verbally expressed the crash is under investigation and didn't relinquish any more details.
"This is an exceptionally arduous time for the friends and family of the missing pilot and the Navy community," Rear Admiral Christopher Grady verbalized.
The two F/A-18C Hornets crashed about 5:40 p.m. local time about 250 miles west of Wake Island. The island is 2,300 miles west of Honolulu.
The other pilot safely ejected, was rescued from the ocean by helicopter and was treated and relinquished from medical facilities aboard the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson.
The pilots and their squadron emanate from Carrier Air Wing 17 predicated at Naval Air Station Lemoore in California's San Joaquin Valley.
All other aircraft that were airborne at the time safely returned to the ship.
The search for the missing pilot involved the guided-missile cruiser USS Bunker Hill, the guided-missile destroyer USS Gridley, the USS Sterett, the USS Dewey and two helicopter squadrons.
The Carl Vinson strike group team departed San Diego on Aug. 22 for what was promulgated as a 9 1/2-month deployment.
The F/A-18C is a twin-engine, single-seat strike fighter, designed to function both as a fighter — in roles such as engaging enemy aircraft — and as an assailment aircraft, bombing ground targets for example. Fifty-six feet long and with a wingspan of 40½ feet, Hornet C models have been deployed since the tardy 1980s.
Built by contractor McDonnell Douglas, the jets are capable of flying at speeds more preponderant than Mach 1.7 and altitudes of more than 50,000 feet, according to the Navy.
Rescuers end ocean search for Navy fighter pilot
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