Navy orders ‘safety pause’ after string of deadly crashes

The U.S. Navy will begin a “security pause” on Monday for non-deployed plane following two crashes in Southern California this month that brought on the deaths of a pilot and 5 Marines, officers introduced.

“On account of latest crashes involving U.S. Navy and Marine Corps plane, Commander, Naval Air Forces has directed all non-deployed Navy aviation models to conduct a security pause on June 13 to be able to overview risk-management practices and conduct coaching on menace and error-management processes,” the Navy stated Saturday in a press release.
 
“As a way to preserve the readiness of our drive, we should guarantee the protection of our folks stays one in every of our high priorities,” it continued. “Deployed models will conduct the protection pause on the earliest doable alternative.”

The bulletins got here after a spate of army plane crashes.

An aircraft based at Marine Corps Air Station Camp Pendleton with five Marines onboard crashed Wednesday near Glamis in Imperial County.
Two crashes in Southern California this month brought on the deaths of a pilot and 5 Marines.
FOX 5 San Diego
Lance Cpl. Evan A. Strickland, 19, of Valencia, N.M., died in a recent aircraft accident.
Lance Cpl. Evan A. Strickland, 19, of Valencia, N.M., died in a latest plane accident.
AP

On June 3 Navy Lt. Richard Bullock died throughout a coaching mission in Trona, California.

On Wednesday, 5 Marines have been killed when a Marine MV-22B Osprey crashed in a Southern California desert about 150 miles west of San Diego.

Greater than 40 folks have died flying on Ospreys since 1991, in accordance with the Washington Publish.

On Friday, the third Marine Plane Wing recognized the useless Marines as Corporal Nathan Carlson, 21, of Winnebago, Illinois; Captain Nicholas Losapio, 31, of Rockingham, New Hampshire; Cpl. Seth Rasmuson, 21, of Johnson, Wyoming; Capt. John Sax, of Placer, California; and Lance Cpl. Evan Strickland, 19, of Valencia, New Mexico.

And on Thursday, a army plane crashed lower than 100 miles from Wednesday’s crash. All service members on the Navy helicopter that went down within the crash survived.

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