Hot topics close

F-35 Jet Is Missing After Pilot Parachutes Free in South Carolina

F35 Jet Is Missing After Pilot Parachutes Free in South Carolina
The pilot, whose name has not been released, was taken to a medical center in the Charleston area, where he was stable.
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Supported by

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
F-35 Jet Is Missing After Pilot Parachutes Free in South Carolina

The pilot, whose name has not been released, was taken to a medical center in the Charleston area, where he was stable.

  • Share full article
A fighter jet in the sky.
A Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II. A Marine Corps pilot safely ejected from an F-35 Lightning II over North Charleston, S.C. on Sunday, prompting a search for the missing aircraft.Credit...Michel Euler/Associated Press
Sept. 18, 2023Updated 12:27 p.m. ET

The authorities on Monday were asking for the public’s help in finding an F-35 jet that disappeared after a U.S. Marine pilot used an emergency parachute to eject from it Sunday afternoon in North Charleston, S.C.

The pilot, who was unidentified, was in an F-35 from Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort. He was taken to a local medical center and his condition was stable late Sunday, Jeremy Huggins, a spokesman for Joint Base Charleston, said.

It was unclear why the pilot needed to eject.

Based on the last-known position of the jet, an F-35B Lightning II, the base was focusing on an area around Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion, in coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration, Joint Base Charleston said late on Sunday, adding that it was seeking the public’s help.

The authorities asked anyone with information about the missing jet’s location to pass along tips.

The F-35B Lightning II is the variant used by the Marine Corps, a short-takeoff and vertical-landing version. Manufactured by Lockheed Martin, it completed its first combat strikes for the Marine Corps in Afghanistan in 2018.

The F-35’s Joint Strike Fighter program is the Department of Defense’s most expensive weapon system program, with estimates that it will cost nearly $1.7 trillion to buy, operate, and sustain the aircraft and systems over its lifetime, the Government Accountability Office said in a report released in MayThe purchase cost of the Marine Corps jet has varied over the life of the program. The federal government said it was as low as $70 million in 2012, and the Project on Government Oversight said it was as high as $135 million in 2020.

John Ismay and Christine Hauser contributed reporting.

Rebecca Carballo is a reporter based in New York. More about Rebecca Carballo

  • Share full article
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
News Archive
  • After Everything
    After Everything
    Fans Slam 'After Everything' Over Josephine Langford Absence
    13 Sep 2023
    1
  • Tyson Bagent
    Tyson Bagent
    Who is Chicago Bears quarterback Tyson Bagent? The son of 'The ...
    22 Oct 2023
    5
  • Bre Tiesi
    Bre Tiesi
    Thursday's Hot Clicks: Bad News, Ladies—Johnny Manziel Is Officially Off the Market
    15 Mar 2018
    3
  • NBC Sports
    NBC Sports
    Tony Dungy’s letter to the NFL: How to improve the head coach hiring process
    13 Feb 2022
    1
  • Spring 2022
    Spring 2022
    Biggest Isekai Anime of Spring 2022 | CBR
    20 Mar 2022
    1
  • Ruby Franke
    Ruby Franke
    'Big day for evil': Former YouTuber Ruby Franke detailed how she ...
    22 Mar 2024
    18
This week's most popular shots