Navy cracks down on Supermanning stunt
Since 12-31-05
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Subject: Navy cracks down on ‘Supermanning’ stunt
http://www.navytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-1438159.php
Navy cracks down on ‘Supermanning’ stunt
Associated Press
December 29, 2005
NORFOLK, Virginia — The Navy is cracking down on what has become a deadly stunt:
helicopter crewmen who suspend themselves in midair by only a safety belt.
“Supermanning,” as it is known, was blamed for the death in October of a crewman
who fell from a helicopter over the Persian Gulf, a Navy investigation
concluded.
The commander of the Atlantic Fleet Naval Air Force, Rear Adm. Denby H. Starling
II, said he has disciplined eight crew members from a Corpus Christi, Texas,
squadron for performing a similar stunt or failing to report the activity to
superiors.
“My initial reaction was that I was absolutely flabbergasted,” Starling told The
Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk.
“I figured this had to be a one-time deal, but when we asked questions, we found
out it was not,” he said. “Other guys in this squadron had engaged in this kind
of activity as well.
”Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian K. Joplin, 32, died Oct. 4 after falling about
125 feet to the Persian Gulf.
The helicopter’s two pilots were unaware Joplin was performing the stunt until
just before he fell and were not disciplined, according to the investigation.
Joplin was attached by a 10-foot safety belt to the helicopter’s stern ramp,
according to the investigation report, obtained by The Virginian-Pilot through a
Freedom of Information Act request.
With his body suspended by the belt, he reportedly used his hands to hold on to
the edge of the ramp.
“His legs were flying out behind him horizontally” in “the Superman maneuver,
” the report said.
Two crew members apparently saw Joplin lose his grip and tried unsuccessfully to
pull him back into the aircraft, but the belt slipped off and he fell.
Starling said he believes this was the first time someone died during the stunt.
It is unclear how long Supermanning has been practiced, he said.
Members of the Texas squadron were disciplined Dec. 16 for participating in or
not reporting the stunts. The crew was stripped of their air crew designations,
meaning they will never fly as aircraft crew members again. They were, however,
allowed to remain in the Navy and the squadron.
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)