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U.S. troops missing in helicopter crash presumed dead

The chopper went down during a training mission Tuesday night
11 presumed dead in military chopper crash in Florida 01:57

EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. -- Human remains and helicopter parts were recovered Wednesday after seven Marines and four soldiers crashed in heavy fog during military training in Florida.

Marines, soldiers presumed dead in Florida Panhandle crash 02:10

All 11 service members were presumed dead after the Army National Guard's UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter went down offshore, a Pentagon official said.

Kim Urr, 62, who works at the nearby Navarre Beach campground, said she heard a strange sound, followed by two explosions around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday.

"It sounded like something metal either being hit or falling over, that's what it sounded like. And there were two booms afterward, similar to what you hear with ordnance booms, but more muffled," Urr said.

President Obama spoke with the military leaders involved and expressed his condolences to the families before saying he's confident of a detailed and thorough investigation, said his spokesman, Josh Earnest.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with them and their families as the search and rescue continues," Defense Secretary Ash Carter said on Capitol Hill.

At a congressional hearing, Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that the crash was "a reminder to us that those who serve put themselves at risk both in training and in combat."

Military personnel wade in the water and search on the beach under heavy fog at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, March 11, 2015, for the wreckage of a military helicopter that crashed with 11 service members aboard.
Military personnel wade in the water and search on the beach under heavy fog at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, March 11, 2015, for the wreckage of a military helicopter that crashed with 11 service members aboard. AP Photo/Melissa Nelson-Gabriel

The Black Hawk crashed as Marines and National Guardsmen practiced "insertion and extraction missions," using small boats and helicopters to get troops into and out of a target site, said Capt. Barry Morris, spokesman for the Marine Corps Special Operations Command at Camp Lejeune.

Fog had reduced visibility to less than two miles at the time, according to the National Weather Service. Another helicopter participating in the training returned undamaged, authorities said.

Despite the human remains washing ashore, the military still called it a rescue mission Wednesday, said Sara Vidoni, a spokeswoman for Eglin Air Force Base, outside Pensacola.

The fog remained so heavy Wednesday that search boats just offshore could be heard but not seen, blasting horns as their crews peered into the choppy water. It finally began to lift in the afternoon, enabling a helicopter to slowly survey the water.

About a dozen airmen wearing fatigues walked shoulder-to-shoulder down the beach, scanning the sand, while civilian rescue crews and searchers with dogs joined the effort.

The Coast Guard said debris was first spotted about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday, and that the search area expanded to a 17-mile stretch of the narrow sound separating Santa Rosa Island from the Florida Panhandle mainland.

The Marines were part of a special operations group based in Camp Lejeune. The National Guard soldiers were from a unit based in Hammond, Louisiana. They had arrived Sunday for a week of training.

None were immediately identified, so that families could be told first.

The helicopter that crashed had joined the training from an airport in nearby Destin. The site includes 20 miles of pristine beachfront under military control since before World War II - an ideal place for special operations units from across the military to practice, test range manager Glenn Barndollar told The AP last year.

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