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1 Navy sailor killed, 4 injured in freeway crash in rural San Diego County

Authorities inspect the wreckage of a vehicle near boulders in a desert area
Firefighters and Border Patrol agents work to rescue the occupants trapped in the wreckage of a Navy van after it crashed Friday morning off Interstate 8 near Jacumba Hot Springs.
(California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection)
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One Navy sailor was killed and four others were injured when their van crashed Friday morning off Interstate 8 near the rural San Diego County area of Jacumba Hot Springs, authorities said.

All five sailors — a woman and four men — were assigned to West Coast-based Naval Special Warfare units, the Navy said in a statement. The crash occurred as they were returning to San Diego from training at Camp Billy Machen, a desert training facility operated by Naval Special Warfare Command near Niland, southeast of the Salton Sea in Imperial County.

Though it was not immediately clear whether those involved were SEALs, the Navy describes SEAL teams as “the heart of the NSW force.”

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The crash happened shortly before 10 a.m. as the sailors’ Chevrolet Express van was headed west toward San Diego when it veered north off the freeway near Carrizo Gorge Road, California Highway Patrol spokesperson Officer Travis Garrow said.

The van went down a dirt embankment and slammed into a large boulder, Garrow said. A man seated in the middle rear of the van died at the scene.

The Navy said one of its fighter jets crashed in the Southern California desert, killing the pilot. Nobody on the ground was hurt.

Navy officials said in a statement that the sailor’s name would be released 24 hours after his family was notified.

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Three of the van’s occupants suffered critical injuries. They were taken to a nearby U.S. Border Patrol helipad, then flown to hospitals in San Diego, Capt. Neil Czapinski of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. A fourth occupant suffered moderate injuries and was driven by ambulance to a hospital.

Two of the sailors remained in critical condition and two were stable Friday night, according to the Navy.

Garrow said he did not know the victims’ names, ages or cities of residence. The CHP often provides ages and residence information in similar situations.

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He said CHP investigators are trying to figure out where people were sitting when the van crashed, and whether the sailors were wearing seat belts. In an email, Garrow wrote that “at this point in the investigation alcohol (and/or) drugs are not suspected to be a factor.”

Hours after the van crash, a Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet based at Naval Air Station Lemoore went down about 2:30 p.m. near Trona in the Mojave Desert, killing the pilot, the Navy said. Nobody on the ground was hurt.

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