WASHINGTON -- Seven Marines from a North Carolina unit were killed
and several injured in a training accident at the Hawthorne Army Depot
in western Nevada, the Marine Corps said Tuesday.
The cause of the accident shortly before 10 p.m. PST, Monday is under
investigation, officials said in a statement from the 2nd Marine
Expeditionary Force at Camp LeJeune, N.C.
The injured were taken to area hospitals for treatment and
further evaluation. A spokesman for Renown Regional Medical Center in
Reno, the area's major trauma hospital, couldn't immediately confirm how
many people were being treated there. A nursing supervisor at Saint
Mary's Regional Medical Center said her hospital hadn't taken patients
from the incident
"We send our prayers and condolences to the families of Marines
involved in this tragic incident. We remain focused on ensuring that
they are supported through this difficult time," said the force's
commander, Maj. Gen. Raymond C. Fox. "We mourn their loss, and it is
with heavy hearts we remember their courage and sacrifice."
The identities of those killed were not released pending notification of their families and a 24-hour waiting period after that.
The Hawthorne Army Depot stores and disposes of ammunition. The
facility is made up of hundreds of buildings spread over more than 230
square miles.
Hawthorne has held an important place in American military history
since World War II when it became the staging area for ammunition, bombs
and rockets for the war. The Nevada Division of Environmental
Protection says that the depot employed more than 5,500 people at its
peak. Nevada was chosen for the location because of its remoteness in
the wake of a devastating explosion at the government's main depot in
New Jersey in the 1920s.
It opened in September 1930 as the Naval Ammunition Depot Hawthorne,
was redesignated Hawthorne Army Ammunition Plant in 1977 when it moved
under the control of the Army, according to its website. In 1994, the
site ended its production mission and became Hawthorne Army Depot. The
site currently serves several purposes for the military, including
storing ammunition and explosives and providing what the military calls
an ideal training facility for special forces preparing for deployments
to similar desert terrain in places like Afghanistan.
Nevada Republican Sen. Dean Heller tweeted: "Thoughts and prayers are
with the families who lost a loved one in the Hawthorne Army Depot
explosion. Grateful for their service."
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