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Search expanded for 2 Navy training jets that crashed in Gulf of Mexico

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Posted 12:41PM on Thursday 9th May 2002 ( 23 years ago )
PENSACOLA, Fla. - Wind and waves forced the Coast Guard to expand its search Thursday for seven crew members from two Navy jets that crashed into the Gulf of Mexico. <br> <br> No sign of crew members had been found amid four debris fields, said Harry White, a spokesman at Pensacola Naval Air Station, where the planes were based. <br> <br> The two twin-engine T-39 Sabreliners went down Wednesday during a training mission about 40 miles south of this Florida Panhandle city. Three people were on one plane, four on the other. <br> <br> White could not say whether the planes collided. <br> <br> &#34;They suddenly disappeared from our radar,&#34; White said. &#34;There was no distress call.&#34; <br> <br> The initial search concentrated on a 2-square-mile zone where searchers found pieces of aircraft skin, insulation and equipment. The area was expanded Thursday to 50 square miles as currents scattered the debris. <br> <br> The jets, a military version of a popular business jet, are used at Pensacola for training navigators and other non-pilot air crew officers for the Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and foreign military services. The planes were assigned to Training Squadron 86, part of Training Air Wing 6. <br> <br> Training Squadron 86 recently amassed more than 330,000 mishap-free flight hours and was awarded several honors for its safety record, according to its Web site. <br> <br> The squadron trains flight officers in navigation, radar intercept operation, electronic warfare and airborne tactical data systems and provides flight support for ground control approach and air intercept training. <br> <br> Its foreign students include trainees from Italy, Singapore, Germany and Saudi Arabia. <br> <br> It was the second military crash in the area in as many weeks. On April 30, an Air Force F-15C Eagle fighter out of nearby Eglin Air Force Base with one man on board crashed into the gulf during a weapons testing flight. The pilot is missing and presumed dead. <br> <br> <br> ---- <br> <br> On the Net: <br> <br> Training Air Wing 6: http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/agency/navy/trawing6.htm <br> <br>

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