From Joint Task Force 505 News Releases
KATHMANDU, Nepal, May 17, 2015 – Joint Task Force 505
officials today identified the six U.S. Marines who were killed along with two
Nepalese soldiers when their UH-1Y Huey helicopter went down in the mountains
of Nepal May 12.
The fallen Marines are:
-- Capt. Dustin R. Lukasiewicz, a UH-1Y pilot with Marine
Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 469, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine
Aircraft Wing, Camp Pendleton, California, and a native of Nebraska;
-- Capt. Christopher L. Norgren, a UH-1Y pilot with
HMLA-469, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Camp Pendleton,
California, and a native of Kansas;
-- Sgt. Ward M. Johnson, IV, a UH-1Y helicopter crew chief
with HMLA-469, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Camp
Pendleton, California, and a native of Florida;
-- Sgt. Eric M. Seaman, a UH-1Y helicopter crew chief with
HMLA-469, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Camp Pendleton,
California, and a native of California;
-- Cpl. Sara A. Medina, a combat photographer with Marine
Corps Installations Pacific, Okinawa, Japan, and a native of Illinois; and
-- Lance Cpl. Jacob A. Hug, a combat videographer with
Marine Corps Installations Pacific, Okinawa, Japan, and a native of Arizona.
Recovery Effort
Today at approximately 10:00 a.m. Nepal Standard Time,
Nepalese soldiers and service members from Joint Task Force 505 safely
recovered the fallen U.S. and Nepalese service members to the Tribhuvan
International Airport in Kathmandu, Nepal.
The soldiers and Marines were honorably received at TIA and
will be transported to the appropriate medical facilities to be properly
identified by mortuary affairs personnel.
JTF 505 Commander Marine Corps Lt. Gen John E. Wissler
thanked the people of Nepal and the Nepalese armed forces for their selfless
dedication in the search and recovery of the fallen service members.
"I am honored to serve alongside the Nepalese soldiers
and to call them my friends" he said.
"You never hesitated in the joint effort to bring our
brothers home. Everyone united -- the soldiers hiking through hazardous
terrain, the pilots flying in uncertain weather conditions and the Nepalese
special forces standing watch over our Marines on a mountainside at night,”
Wissler said. “We honor our fallen comrades through our unselfish support to
each other in this time of grief."
The fallen service members were "courageous, selfless
individuals dedicated to the international Humanitarian Aid mission here in
Nepal whose memories will live on through the lives they touched during this
disaster relief operation and in their previous service to their
countries," he said.
JTF 505 arrived in Nepal April 29 to conduct humanitarian
aid and disaster relief operations following the April 25 magnitude-7.8
earthquake. The helicopter crashed about 8 miles north of Charikot, Nepal,
while supporting casualty evacuations following a second earthquake of
magnitude 7.3 that occurred May 12.
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