THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Marine jet severs ski-lift cable in Italy – 1998

Via History.com

Cavalese cable-car disaster: It's 20 years since a US aircraft killed 20 people in the Dolomites and still no one accepts responsibility | The Independent | The Independent

Cavalese cable car disaster March 9 1976 in Italy [471 × 357] Forty-three people died : r/NoSillySuffix

CNN - Report: Marine jet too low, too fast in Italy accident - March 10, 1998

 

On February 3, 1998, a U.S. Marine jet flying low over the town of Cavalese in the Italian Alps severs a ski-lift cable, sending a tram crashing to the ground and killing 20 people.

Cavalese is located in the Dolomite Mountains, about 20 miles northeast of Trento, Italy. In 1976, 42 people there, including 15 children, lost their lives when the cable holding up their ski-lift car snapped. The car fell 700 feet, with its overhead assembly landing on top of it. There was only one survivor–a 14-year-old girl.

On February 3, 1998, 20 Europeans, mostly Germans and Belgians, were taking a ski tram up Cermis Mountain when an EA-6B Prowler operated by the U.S. Marines suddenly flew by. The anti-radar aircraft sliced right through the steel cable holding up the tram and it plunged more than 250 feet to the ground. Everyone on board was killed instantly.

The plane suffered minimal damage and returned to its base in Italy. The pilot, Captain Richard J. Ashby, and navigator, Captain Joseph Schweitzer, destroyed a videotape that had recorded their flight before an investigation began. Still, it was soon discovered that the plane had been flying at only 360 feet above the ground, in spite of regulations that set the minimum altitude for flights at 2,000 feet. This revelation spurred large anti-American protests in Italy. President Bill Clinton apologized to the victims’ families and promised compensation, but, pursuant to NATO rules, the U.S. military claimed jurisdiction over the case, despite objections from Italian prosecutors.

In a military court at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Ashby and Schweitzer were charged with involuntary manslaughter and negligent homicide. They claimed that their equipment had malfunctioned and that their maps had not shown the location of the ski-lift. Despite Italian claims that American pilots regularly and intentionally ignored safety regulations to execute risky maneuvers, the crew was acquitted in March 1999. Ashby and Schweitzer were court-martialed for obstruction of justice for their destruction of the videotape and dismissed from the Marines.

In May 1999, Congress failed to approve a compensation fund for the victims. Italy, however, later approved nearly $2 million dollars in compensation per victim, and, according to NATO regulations, the United States was held liable for 75 percent of the damages.

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8 Comments
MrLiberty
MrLiberty
February 3, 2023 8:04 am

And for some reason, nobody ever asks what the hell US pilots were doing training in Italy in the first place.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
February 3, 2023 8:39 am

Not the first time Italy has suffered at the hands of incompetent American aviators. The USS America returned from her Med Cruise in 1980 missing 4 A7E Corsair II’s. They left them burning in Sigonella Italy. Took out a city block as I was told and it never made the news.

Arthur
Arthur
February 3, 2023 9:16 am

NATO regulations supersede Italian law. It’s not an alliance, it’s an occupation.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Arthur
February 3, 2023 11:47 am

UN and the WHO do the same thing — even here in the United States.

And just wait until the new ‘treaty’ with the WHO is signed that gives that body complete, global control over declaring a ‘pandemic’ and then, once declared, all authority and power in how to deal with it — including mandating jabs, requiring jab passports, etc.

United States National Sovereignty is a thing of the past … our Nation has been under the jackboot of international NGOs for quite some time now … whether the international banking thugs or the UN or the WHO …

Hecho en Chine
Hecho en Chine
February 3, 2023 9:25 am

my Heroes! (among a multitude of firemen*, 1st responders, pigs policemen*, ‘educators’, ‘health care professionals’, ‘Duly elected humble public servants, etc.)

*Sorry! i MEANT F,P, PERSONS!

Thank You for Your service!

“All Right. Ha Ha! Nice!”

Paleocon
Paleocon
February 3, 2023 12:22 pm

So they got off like hot dogger John McCain.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 3, 2023 1:40 pm

Camp Lujeune lol.

Stucky
Stucky
February 3, 2023 2:24 pm

“the crew was acquitted in March 1999. “

That, also, is a damned tragedy.