Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Paratrooper Killed in 800-Foot Drop at Bragg ID’d

My basic training post.
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https://www.mysticarmynavy.com/images/82ndairborne-l.jpg

Staff Sgt. Jamal Clay had jumped out of an aircraft 25 times before, always dropping safely to the ground.

But Saturday night, something went wrong. Clay, a 25-year-old paratrooper who survived two deployments to Iraq, fell 800 feet to his death at Fort Bragg's Sicily Drop Zone during what was supposed to have been a routine training exercise.

Clay's death remains under investigation, but early reports point to a parachute malfunction, according to a news release from the 82nd Airborne Division.

Clay, a married father of two from Elida, Ohio, was a vehicle recovery supervisor with Company G, 1st Battalion, 319th Airborne Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division.

He had last jumped from an airplane four days earlier, on June 21, as part of a 10-day training exercise that simulates traditional airborne operations, such as an assault on a drop zone or airfield.

"Staff Sergeant Jamal Clay was the best paratrooper in the company. Everybody wanted to be like him," said Capt. Luke Bird, Clay's company commander. "He was a natural leader and a skilled mechanic who made the whole battalion better."

As part of the exercise Saturday evening, Clay was one of 1,700 paratroopers scheduled to jump into Sicily Drop Zone. Clay and other Soldiers were to seize and secure the drop zone so troops who followed could land safely.

Humvees and other large vehicles often are dropped from the sky in advance of paratroopers. Clay and other mechanics would have been on hand to repair any damage to those vehicles, said Sgt. 1st Class Alan Davis, an 82nd Airborne Division spokesman.

It was a standard night jump, 800 feet high with a static line attached to the plane that opens the parachute after a Soldier exits.

New parachute used

6 comments:

  1. You never know. I once had my risers twisted and bicycled like the devil in ice and had a Mae West flapping the risers like a ... screaming chicken?

    I don't remember what year it was (late 70's) we had a Division drop and one trooper died because of a malfunction. I believe his chute was twisted.

    I took my training seriously and mentally went over everything before a jump.

    All the way sir!

    Airborne!

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  2. I remember entering the gates at dawn and seeing the sign "Home of the 82nd Airborne" and thinking, now what have I gotten myself into this time? :)

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  3. Brock, Et Alii:

    Talk about coincidences!

    As you know, I grew up right outside the main gate of Fort Bragg, and there were plenty of times that our family (and the general public) went to the drop zones to watch the paratroopers.

    Anyway, on my blog, "OUR ETERNAL STRUGGLE", there is a feature length Hollywood movie, "AIRBORNE", made in 1962, about a young farm boy who goes to Fort Bragg to become a paratrooper.

    Also, if you scroll down to nearly the bottom of the page and look at the slide show from the United States Army, one of those official photographs is of the parachute jump on Tuesday 21 June 2011.

    Thank you.

    John Robert Mallernee
    Armed Forces Retirement Home
    Gulfport, Mississippi 39507

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  4. Great timing on this article. My son just left Tue for AIT and told me he was going to sign up for an extension to go to "jump" school.

    D. Stroud
    Tarboro, NC

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