Plane Broke Formation During Practice
ANN REALTIME UPDATE
05.19.07 0002 EDT: We have waited until we were sure his
family had been notified, but media sources are now confirming what
we feared... Snowbird 2, Captain Shawn McCaughey (30), from
Candiac, Quebec, was lost in Friday's tragic Snowbird practice
session accident. Captian McCaughey was in his second year with the
Snowbirds.
Prior to joining the Canadian Forces in 2000, he earned a
Bachelor's degree in Physical Geography from Concordia University
in Montreal and had earned a civilian commercial pilot's
license.
According to his Canadian Forces bio, Captain McCaughey's
entered the Canadian Forces in 2000, as a Direct Entry
Officer (DEO). After receiving his wings on the CT-155 Hawk in
2003, he was posted to 2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School
(2CFFTS) in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, as a flying instructor on the
CT-156 Harvard II, the NATO Flying Training in Canada Program's
(NFTC) new training aircraft. During his tour, Captain McCaughey
(pictured below) obtained over 500 instructional hours and earned
an A2 instructional category.

ANN extends it condolences to the members and family of the CF
Snowbirds... a truly amazing and accomplished group of airmen.
ANN REALTIME REPORTING 05.18.07 2200 EDT: A
Canadian Forces Snowbirds demonstration team pilot was killed
Friday afternoon when his CT-114 Tutor jet crashed near a Montana
air force base.

FAA spokesman Allen Kenitzer told the Associated Press the
aircraft broke formation, and crashed. No one was seen ejecting
from the jet.
"It just smacked into the ground and there was a big ball of
flames," witness Gillian Scarber told the Great Falls Tribune. She
said the accident aircraft appeared to be coming out of a loop when
the mishap occurred.
The Snowbirds were rehearsing for a performance this
weekend at Malmstrom Air Force Base, according to Canadian Forces
spokesman Lt. Jeff Noel. The identity of the pilot has not been
released.
Another witness said he and his son watched as the accident
occurred.
"My son said, 'Dad, look at their wings,'" Greg Dart said. "And
as I looked, the wing wiggled up and it went straight down. It was
less than a second before it hit the ground.

"The two planes came back, circled over the top and then went
on," he said. "I didn’t see a chute -- that was the
first thing I looked for -- but I didn‘t see anything.
And they were so low that I can’t imagine anyone getting
out."
The last incident involving the Snowbirds occurred in August
2005, when pilot Andrew Mackay was forced to bail out of his Tutor
after it suffered engine failure. In December 2004, two Snowbirds
jets experienced a midair collision during practice near Mossbank,
Saskatchewan. That accident claimed the life of Capt. Miles
Selby.
Although loved by a Canadian public that reportedly views the
Snowbirds as an important symbol of pride in the national military,
the Snowbirds have increasingly fought budget cuts and threats of
disbandment. The team has also come under criticism within military
ranks in recent years, as being an unnecessary $10-million-per-year
drain on Canada's limited military resources.
The advanced age of the Snowbird's fleet of Tutors -- a training
airplane that first saw service in the 1960s, and was replaced by
the Canadian military in 2000 by the British-Aerospace Hawk T1 --
is also increasingly seen as a liability.

A 2003 study commissioned by the Canadian military recommended
replacing the Snowbirds' Tutors with Hawks, although officials
maintained the Tutors would be able to fly safely until 2020.
Friday's accident was the sixth Snowbird fatality in the team's
36-year history.