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Air Force Thunderbirds pilot dies in Nevada F-16 crash

The accident happened when Maj. Stephen Del Bagno's F-16 Fighting Falcon crashed during a routine aerial demonstration training flight, according to the Air Force.
Credit: U.S. Air Force
Air Force Thunderbirds pilot Maj. Stephen Del Bagno was killed Wednesday, April 4, 2018, during a routine flight demonstration in Nevada.

MELBOURNE, Fla. — A U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds pilot was killed Wednesday morning during flight training in Nevada.

The Thunderbirds posted the news Thursday on its website and social media accounts.

The accident happened when Maj. Stephen Del Bagno's F-16 Fighting Falcon crashed over the Nevada Test and Training Range about 10:30 a.m. during a routine aerial demonstration training flight, according to the Air Force.

"We are mourning the loss of Major Del Bagno," Brig. Gen. Jeannie Leavitt, 57th Wing Commander, stated in a Thursday afternoon Facebook post. "He was an integral part of our team and our hearts are heavy with his loss. We ask everyone to provide his family and friends the space to heal during this difficult time."

Officials are investigating the cause of the crash.

The Thunderbirds headlined the Melbourne Air & Space Show at Orlando Melbourne International Airport from March 24-25. The event was the inaugural show on the Thunderbirds' 2018 schedule.

"We ask that everyone keep the pilot and his family and the Thunderbirds family in their prayers," said Chris Dirato, spokesman of B. Lilley Productions. The Melbourne, Fla., company, founded by promoter Bryan Lilley, organized the Melbourne Air & Space Show.

Credit: U.S. Air Force
Air Force Thunderbirds pilot Maj. Stephen Del Bagno was killed Wednesday, April 4, 2018, during a routine flight demonstration in Nevada.

"It's a great bunch of folks, from the pilots to the maintainers and all the officers. They're great representatives of the United States Air Force," Dirato said.

"It's with heavy hearts that we heard the news of the F-16 crashing," he said.

In light of the accident, the Thunderbirds' appearance Saturday and Sunday at the March Air Reserve Base's "March Field Air & Space Expo" in California was canceled. It was not yet known how the accident would impact the remainder of the 2018 Thunderbirds season.

Del Bagno was the slot pilot for the Thunderbirds, flying the No. 4 jet. The Valencia, Calif., resident was in his first season with the team. According to his Thunderbirds biography, he was previously a civilian flight instructor, corporate pilot, skywriter and banner tow pilot. He logged more than 3,500 flight hours in more than 30 different aircraft, with 1,400 hours as an Air Force pilot.

“No man is an island: We pilots tend to feel the pain of losing one of our brothers and sisters,” said retired Air Force Lt. Col. Ron Davis, Space Coast Warbird Airshow spokesman. He flew KC-130 tankers from 1967-77.

The Thunderbirds headlined the Space Coast Warbird Airshow last March in Titusville, Fla. Aircraft are staging for this year’s show, which kicks off Friday at Space Coast Regional Airport.

“They’re flying high-performance aircraft close to the limits of those aircrafts’ capability. That’s why we have been enthralled by them for 65 years," Davis said of the Thunderbirds.

“What may or may not have happened will be looked at very closely, very professionally, by an Air Force accident investigation board. And you want to talk about ‘fine-toothed comb’ — that’s an Air Force accident board,” he said.

B. Lilley Productions has booked the Thunderbirds for its upcoming air shows in Fort Lauderdale on May 5-6; Ocean City, Md., on June 16-17; and Stewart International Airport in New York on Sept. 15-16.

"We're going to take direction and guidance from the Thunderbirds. Like everyone else, we're going to wait to hear the news from them as to what their future plans are," Dirato said.

Thursday morning, Air Force Maj. John "Rain" Waters piloted an F-16 Fighting Falcon from Shaw Air Force Base in South Carolina to Titusville. He'll star during the Space Coast Warbird Airshow with the F-16 Viper Demonstration Team.

"My thoughts and prayers go out to the family. The Air Force is a very tight-knit community. Any time we lose a member of our team, we feel the effects throughout," said Waters, as he stood on the tarmac next to his fighter jet.

"My heartfelt sorrow goes out to the family. And I wish them the best in this difficult time," he said.

The incident was the third U.S. military aircraft crash this week.

Four crew members were killed when a Marine CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter crashed Tuesday in California during a training mission along the U.S.-Mexico border west of El Centro. The same day, a Marine Harrier jet crashed during takeoff from an airport in the East African nation of Djibouti. The pilot ejected.

The Air Force formed the Thunderbirds in 1953. The team's worst accident was the "Diamond Crash" in 1982. Four pilots were killed when their planes went down at Thunderbird Lake. A malfunction in the leader's plane led him and the three others to crash in the diamond formation straight into the desert

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