An HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter from Nellis Air Force Base — similar to this one shown at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. — crashed at 10 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 18, 2016, at the Nevada Test and Training Range, injuring four crew members. (U.S. Air Force photo/Christopher Okula)
A Pave Hawk rescue helicopter is displayed July 15, 2010, in the Thunderbirds hangar at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas during a memorial service for airmen who died after their Pave Hawk helicopter was shot down by hostile fire June 9, 2010, in Afghanistan. (Gary Thompson/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
By KEITH ROGERS
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
A Pave Hawk rescue helicopter from Nellis Air Force Base crashed during a nighttime training mission Thursday at the Nevada Test and Training Range, base officials said.
Four crew members from the Air Force HH-60 helicopter “were transported to a local medical facility and are receiving treatment for minor injuries,” Nellis public affairs officials said in a statement early Friday.
The crash at 10 p.m. Thursday was in an undisclosed location in a remote part on the 2.9-million-acre military range north of Las Vegas. It was the second accident in less than 24 hours involving aircraft participating in training exercises from the Nellis base.
“They are not related as far as we can tell,” Nellis spokeswoman Lea Greene said.
At 7:40 a.m. Thursday, a Vietnam War-era attack jet operated by a military contractor crashed about a mile from the base on a private lot near Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the northeast Las Vegas Valley. The pilot ejected and survived with nonlife-threatening injuries. No one on the ground was injured when the aircraft hit a cinder block wall and caught fire.
Nellis officials said the helicopter that crashed Thursday night is assigned to the 66th Rescue Squadron, a detached unit of the 23rd Wing at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia.
Although Nellis officials would not confirm the crash site location or release other information Friday in response to a Review-Journal query, organizers of the Best in the Desert “Vegas to Reno” off-road race said in a Facebook post that the helicopter “went down on the course.”
As such, competitors in the 634-mile race that ends Saturday were told to avoid an area between two designated pit stops northeast of Hiko in Lincoln County before the route enters Basin and Range National Monument.
The jet that crashed Thursday morning was a Douglas A-4K Skyhawk. It was one of 10 of the A-4 jets at Nellis owned and operated by Draken International to portray adversaries in Air Force Weapons School and Red Flag air combat exercises.
It was returning from a mission over the Nellis range with another A-4 Skyhawk jet and was circling to land at the base when it went down.
The Air Force is conducting safety investigations into both accidents and the National Transportation Safety Board is involved in the A-4 jet crash probe.
The most tragic training accident involving rescue helicopters from Nellis Air Force Base occurred Sept. 4, 1998, when two Pave Hawks collided during a nighttime exercise 70 miles north of the base, killing 12 airmen, six in each helicopter.
================================
Date:
18-AUG-2016
Time: c22:00 LT
Type:
Sikorsky HH-60G Pave Hawk
Owner/operator: United States Air Force (USAF)
Registration:
C/n / msn:
Fatalities: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 4
Other fatalities: 0
Airplane damage: Unknown
Location: Nevada Test and Training Range, NV - United States of America
Phase: Unknown
Nature: Military
Departure airport: Nellis AFB (LSV/KLSV)
Destination airport: Nellis AFB (LSV/KLSV)
Narrative:
Four injured after an accident during night training.
Exercise Red Flag 16-4 was under way at the time of the accident.
The crash happened at an undisclosed location on the Nevada Test and Training Range, an area with more than 5,000 square miles of air space restricted to military operations.
Crew members were taken to a local medical facility to be treated for minor injuries.
Sources:
http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/military/air-force-helicopter-crashes-nevada-training-range-4-injured
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/air-force-hurt-chopper-crashes-nevada-training-41507901