Four US Air Force helicopter crew killed in England crash

Craft went down in rural area on Norfolk coast during training operation

Emergency vehicles drive past a police road-block in the village of Cley in Norfolk, east England. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
Emergency vehicles drive past a police road-block in the village of Cley in Norfolk, east England. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

Four crew members on board a US military helicopter were believed to have been killed when their aircraft crashed in eastern England during a routine training operation yesterday, police and a Pentagon official said.

The helicopter, assigned to the 48th Fighter Wing based at the nearby US air base RAF Lakenheath, went down at about 6pm on marshland on the north Norfolk coast, a rural area about 209 km northeast of London.

“We can confirm that one of our HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopters went down outside Cley during a low-level flying exercise,” said a spokesman at the USAF base.

The four crew members “are presumed dead,” a Pentagon official said.

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"Sadly we believe that at this time all four of the crew are deceased," added Superintendent Roger Wilson of Norfolk Police in comments to reporters.

Police said next of kin would be informed before further details on the victims were released.

There was no immediate information as to the cause of the crash. The Pave Hawk is made by Sikorsky Aircraft Co, a unit of United Technologies Corp.

Police said a 400 metre area had been cordoned off at the crash site, a nature reserve, while it was determined from the US military what munitions the helicopter was carrying at the time.

No one in the surrounding area had been in any danger, Wilson said.

The US Air Force website said the primary mission of the Pave Hawk helicopter, a highly modified version of the Army Black Hawk, was "to conduct day or night operations into hostile environments to recover downed aircrew or other isolated personnel during war."

It added each aircraft had an automatic flight control system, night vision goggles and a forward looking infrared system “that greatly enhances night low-level operations”, along with anti-ice features to cope with adverse weather.

Lakenheath is also home to Europe’s only F-15 fighter wing, and local media reported that F-15 planes had been flying over the crash site.

In 2001, two single-seat F-15Cs from Lakenheath crashed while on a low-flying training mission over Scotland, killing both pilots.