The Minnesota National Guard released the names of three soldiers killed in a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter crash on Thursday.
Chief Warrant Officer 2 James A. Rogers Jr., 28; Chief Warrant Officer 2
Charles P. Nord, 30; and Sgt. Kort M. Plantenberg, 28, all died in the
helicopter crash approximately 16 miles southwest of St. Cloud,
Minnesota.
All three soldiers were assigned to Company C, 2-211th General Support Aviation Battalion, which is based in St. Cloud.
The troops had returned from a nine-month deployment to Kuwait in May,
according to their service records. From there, they provided aerial
medical evacuation in support of the fight against the Islamic State of
Iraq and Syria.
Rogers enlisted in the Minnesota National Guard on June 5, 2009, as a
field artillery specialist before becoming a warrant officer in 2013.
Nord enlisted in the Minnesota National Guard on Aug. 24, 2007, as an
M1 armor crewman. He became a warrant officer in 2016. Nord leaves
behind his wife, Kaley, two-year-old daughter, Lydia, and a child they
have been expecting.
Plantenberg enlisted in the Minnesota National Guard on March 1, 2016,
as an aircraft electrician. He was a member of the Minnesota Guard
biathlon team and competed in the Chief National Guard Bureau Biathlon
Championships in 2018.
Plantenberg was preparing to start the state’s warrant officer program in March and then later attend flight school.
All three soldiers were born and raised in Minnesota.
The crash that took their lives occurred in a farm field in the central
part of the state during a routine maintenance test flight, Minnesota
Gov. Tim Walz said on the evening of the crash.
“As a veteran of the Minnesota Army National Guard, my heart breaks for
the families, the friends and the fellow soldiers,” Walz said. “The
coming days will be dark and difficult. The state of Minnesota stands
ready to assist the families of our fallen heroes.”
The crash is currently under investigation by a team from the U.S. Army Combat Readiness Center at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
Anytime an accident results in a loss of life — either on the ground or
in the air — Army Combat Readiness Center teams are dispatched to
investigate, said Col. Shawn Manke, commander of the state’s
Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade.
An emergency call was issued not long after the crew departed a Guard
facility near St. Cloud Regional Airport at about 2 p.m. Thursday. The
wreckage was found two hours later by first responders.
“Our Minnesota National Guard family is devastated by the deaths of
these soldiers,” said Maj. Gen. Jon Jensen, the adjutant general of the
Minnesota National Guard. “Our priority right now is ensuring that our
families are taken care of."
Jensen said during a press conference Saturday that he cannot yet say
which pilot was flying at the time of the mishap. The investigation will
determine what exactly went wrong, but officials stressed during the
press conference that the flight itself was not out of the ordinary.
“It was a routine maintenance flight that is conducted almost daily,” Jensen noted.
The last catastrophic helicopter accident for the Minnesota National
Guard occurred in 1993, Jensen said. During that mishap, two aircraft
collided at Camp Ripley, near Little Falls, Minnesota, and five
Guardsmen were killed.
All UH-60 Black Hawks belonging to the Minnesota National Guard have
been grounded during the opening phase of the investigation, but are
expected to begin flying again soon, according to Jensen.
source: Armytimes USA
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