Print

San Diego base already in mourning for seven Marines loses two more after crash

By
Posted 5:32AM on Monday 21st January 2002 ( 23 years ago )
<br> &#34;My kitchen window faces the driveway and when I looked out and there were three Marines ... I knew they were not coming to give me good news,&#34; she said. <br> <br> The representatives had come Sunday to inform her that her son, Staff Sgt. Walter F. &#34;Trae&#34; Cohee III, was one of two Marines killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan <br> <br> Walter Cohee and Sgt. Dwight J. Morgan died shortly after their CH-53E Super Stallion took off from a former Soviet base outside the capital, Kabul. Five others aboard were injured. <br> <br> Both men were based at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, which on Thursday held a tearful memorial for seven others killed Jan. 9 in a Pakistan plane crash. <br> <br> &#34;It&#39;s like someone stepping on your heart,&#34; Major T.V. Johnson, a base spokesman, said Sunday. &#34;The Marine Corps is like a big family but what we feel is just a fraction of what the families are feeling now.&#34; <br> <br> Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said the cause of the latest crash appeared to be mechanical failure. <br> <br> Cohee, 26, of Mardela Springs, Md., was a communication and navigation system technician who joined the Marines in 1993. He had been scheduled to come home in early January, said Jeanne Cohee. <br> <br> But they needed him to stay and work on the helicopters, and her son wasn&#39;t the kind to complain, she said. <br> <br> &#34;He said, &#39;Mom, I didn&#39;t join the Marines to sit still. I joined the Marines to help,&#34;&#39; Cohee told WBOC-TV. <br> <br> Morgan, a 24-year-old helicopter mechanic who joined the Marines in 1998, lived in Mendocino County, about 125 miles north of San Francisco. He had been selected for a promotion to staff sergeant, which will now be awarded posthumously, Johnson said. <br> <br> Classmates and friends remembered Morgan as shy and kind. <br> <br> &#34;I know his family was real proud of his accomplishments,&#34; said Keller McDonald, Morgan&#39;s former high school principal. <br> <br> The helicopter went down 10 p.m. EST Saturday about 40 miles south of Bagram air base. The Super Stallions are designed for the transport of troops, supplies and equipment. <br> <br> Since the 30-passenger, long-range Super Stallion came into service in 1981, there have been seven major crashes and 20 deaths. <br> <br> The Marines halted flights for all 165 of their CH-53E Super Stallions for three weeks in 2000 based on findings of a helicopter crash off the coast of Texas, in which four people were killed. CH-53E flights also were halted in 1996 when a Super Stallion crashed, killing four. <br> <br> Johnson said Sunday he knew of no orders to ground the helicopters. The previous crash that claimed the lives of seven Marines involved a KC-130 that exploded after slamming into a mountain in southwestern Pakistan. <br> <br> Miramar is the former home of the Navy flight school popularized in the movie &#34;Top Gun.&#34; <br> <br> The San Diego-based Marines were part of a squadron known as the Flying Tigers, which had been deployed to the region before Christmas, Johnson said. <br> <br> The squadron has a 50-year history. In their first mission, the Flying Tigers provided support in the largest helicopter exercise ever -- an atomic test exercise at Desert Rock, Nev. They also deployed during the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam War. <br> <br> The injured were: Cpl. David. J. Lynne, 23, from Mecklenburg County, N.C.; Cpl. Ivan A. Montanez, 22, from Royse City, Texas; Cpl. Stephen A. Sullivan, 24, from Pickens, S.C.; Capt. William J. Cody, 30, from Middlesex, N.J., and Capt. Douglas V. Glasgow, 33, from Wooster, Ohio. <br> <br> Glasgow is based at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz. <br> <br>

http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/1/203292

© Copyright 2015 AccessNorthGa.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.