It could take up to two weeks for crews to retrieve the wreckage of a Navy jet that crashed into San Diego Bay earlier this week, military officials said Friday.
The plunge Wednesday of an uncontrolled E/A-18G Growler into the San Diego Bay channel between Coronado and Shelter Island ended a 71-year span of no water mishaps since flights from surrounding fields began 114 years ago at North Island.
San Diego Bay will lose an amphibious assault ship this year but gain an equally brawny replacement as the Navy goes through a planned rotation of huge vessels that transport and deploy Marines, the Navy says.
This article is a recount of a lobster diving trip staff writer Jonathan Raditsas and his friends took in December of 2024. San Diego Bay, ranked the second best place for
Video footage captures the wild moment a Navy fighter jet crashed into California's San Diego Bay unmanned, after the pilots ejected from the aircraft.
It could take up to two weeks for crews to retrieve the wreckage of a Navy jet that crashed into San Diego Bay earlier this week, military officials said Friday. Navy divers worked at the recovery site near Shelter Island on Friday,
A U.S. Navy fighter jet crashed into the San Diego Harbor after two pilots ejected at around 10:15 a.m on Wednesday, Feb. 12.
The fog hung over the airport, in fact all of San Diego Bay was socked in. Visibility for takeoff or landing was zero. It was 1967, and I was commuting to my stewardess job in Los Angeles from San Diego.
Video captured the moment a military fighter jet crashed into San Diego Bay in California on Wednesday (February 12). The U.S. Navy said both pilots survived and are in good condition. US says will levy tariffs on Mexico,
The U.S. Navy says it has recovered more than 25,000 pounds of wreckage from the EA-18G Growler fighter jet that crashed Feb. 12 in San Diego Bay. The work started Feb. 16 and is on track to finish by Sunday,
The E/A-18G Growler went down near Shelter Island February 12, with both pilots ejecting safely before impact.
The fog hung over the airport, in fact all of San Diego Bay was socked in. Visibility for takeoff or landing was zero. It was 1967, and I was commuting to my stewardess job in Los Angeles from San Diego.