AFRCC members assist in search for missing aircraft with four onboard


11/4/2010 - TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AFNS) -- Air Force Rescue Coordination Center officials here worked with Wyoming Department of Military Affairs and Fremont County Emergency Management officials to search for a small aircraft with a father and three of his sons on board that went missing Oct. 25.

According to the Mooney M20J's flight plan, it was en route from Jackson Hole, Wyo., to Pierre, S.D., when radio and radar contact was lost near Wyoming's Gannett Peak in the Wind River Range.

"We received an alert notice from the aircraft's emergency locator transmitter (Oct. 28)," said Master Sgt. Anne Marie Norris, an AFRCC search and rescue controller. "Once we received the notice and confirmed the aircraft was no longer in contact with Salt Lake City Center, we coordinated with the 37th Helicopter Squadron out of F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo., and the Wyoming Civil Air Patrol to start conducting air searches."

The 37th HS flew numerous missions searching for the missing aircraft from Oct. 26 through 30. The Wyoming Army National Guard officials launched a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter to aid in search efforts from Oct. 30 to 31.

"In addition to providing air support since the beginning of the search effort, the Civil Air Patrol provided cell phone and radar forensics," said Staff Sgt. Christopher Uppling, an AFRCC duty officer. "This type of data is extremely helpful in narrowing the search area."

AFRCC members also received radar forensics from the Federal Aviation Administration and the 84th Radar Evaluation Squadron at Hill Air Force Base, Utah.

The wreckage was located Nov. 2 by the ground search teams in a mountainous area in western Wyoming. Sadly, there were no survivors.

AFRCC is the single agency responsible for coordinating all on-land federal search and rescue activities in the continental U.S, Mexico and Canada. Since January 2010, AFRCC members have been involved in saving 520 lives, ranging from locating flood victims and missing/overdue aircraft and personnel to providing cell phone and radar forensic data to search and rescue teams.

"Every mission we are involved in is personal," said Lt. Col. Chuck Tomko, the AFRCC commander. "This mission was not just about locating the missing father and his three sons; it was also about giving closure to the family members and friends who waited to hear about the status of their loved ones. Our thoughts go out to them during this extremely difficult time."

The family issued a statement to the media Nov. 2, which in part read, ""Our heroes throughout this ordeal are the incredibly courageous search team men and women who worked tirelessly over the past week to find our boys. Our gratitude for their efforts is infinite, and we ask that everyone pray for their continued safety as the mission draws to a close."

(Courtesy of Air Forces Northern public affairs)