This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/30/us/fort-campbell-helicopter-crash-kentucky.html

The article has changed 11 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 2 Version 3
Two Army Helicopters Collide Over Kentucky Casualties Reported After Army Helicopters Collide Over Kentucky
(32 minutes later)
Two United States Army helicopters collided during a training mission over Kentucky on Wednesday night, an Army spokeswoman said. Two United States Army helicopters collided during a training mission over Kentucky on Wednesday night, causing casualties, the Army said.
It was not immediately clear whether there were casualties. The spokeswoman, Nondice L. Thurman, said in a statement early Thursday that the status of the crew members was unknown. The two HH-60 Black Hawk assault helicopters crashed into each other at about 10 p.m. during a routine training mission in Trigg County, an Army spokeswoman, Nondice L. Thurman, said in a statement early Thursday.
Gov. Andy Beshear said on Twitter that fatalities were expected, and that the Kentucky State Police and the state’s Division of Emergency Management were responding to the accident. The helicopters were from the 101st Airborne Division, which is based at Fort Campbell and is the Army’s only air assault division. The division said on Twitter early Thursday that the accident had resulted in several casualties, but it did not elaborate. “Right now our focus is on the soldiers and their families,” it said.
The two HH-60 Black Hawk assault helicopters crashed into each other at about 10 p.m. during a routine training mission in Trigg County, Ms. Thurman, who works at Fort Campbell, a sprawling Army base along the Kentucky-Tennessee border, said in the statement. She said the crash was under investigation. Gov. Andy Beshear had said earlier on Twitter that fatalities were expected, and that the Kentucky State Police and the state’s Division of Emergency Management were responding to the accident.
Ms. Thurman said the helicopters were from the 101st Airborne Division, which is based at Fort Campbell and is the Army’s only air assault division. It has been deployed to conflict zones around the world. Ms. Thurman, who works at Fort Campbell, a sprawling Army base along the Kentucky-Tennessee border, said that the crash was under investigation.
No other details about the crash, including the number of people aboard the helicopters, were immediately available. No other details about the crash, including the number of people aboard the helicopters, were immediately available. The weather in the Fort Campbell area early Thursday morning was fair: calm winds, a visibility of 10 miles and a temperature of 39 degrees.
The HH-60, a modified version of the Black Hawk helicopter, can be used for air assaults, medical evacuations and other purposes, according to the Army.The HH-60, a modified version of the Black Hawk helicopter, can be used for air assaults, medical evacuations and other purposes, according to the Army.
In 2018, seven service members died when an HH-60 crashed in Iraq. A military investigation later found that, as a result of a pilot error, the helicopter had struck a steel cable strung horizontally between two buildings. In 2018, seven servicemembers died when an HH-60 crashed in Iraq. A military investigation later found that, as a result of a pilot error, the helicopter had struck a steel cable strung horizontally between two buildings.
This is a developing story.This is a developing story.