Special Operations.Com
In Loving Memory
Hospital
Corpsman 1st Class Brad K. Tucker
US Navy
SEAL
A 30-year-old SEAL fell to his death during a late-night
helicopter special operations exercise on March 10
in the Bahamas. Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Brad K.
Tucker, 30, of Spring, Texas, died from injuries suffered
during a 160-foot fall into the water from an Army
MH-60 helicopter, according to Lt. Ron Hill of Naval
Special Warfare Group Two. Another SEAL who fell,
Operations Specialist 2nd Class Michael J. Brunst,
25, of Phoenix, Ariz., was in stable condition at
a Miami hospital on March 16. The two men were
assigned to SEAL Team 4 out of Little Creek Naval
Amphibious Base, Va. The team was on a routine deployment
with Naval Special Warfare Unit 4 in Roosevelt Roads,
Puerto Rico. According to Hill, the accident took
place during a "k-duck" exercise, in which an inflatable
boat fastened to the underside of a helicopter flying
at an altitude of 5 to 10 feet is released into the
water. SEALs then jump from the helicopter's side
into the water to man the boat and continue the operation.
At 10:30 p.m., the helicopter was approaching the
drop zone and, for reasons still unknown, dropped
the boat from an altitude of 160 feet. The two SEALs
also fell. Investigators still don't know exactly
what happened. "They're trying to determine whether
the guys thought that was the signal to go, or whether
the boat somehow caused them to fall out," Hill said.
Tucker and Brunst
were the only SEALs who fell, he said. Tucker was
killed by the impact, Hill said. The men were pulled
from the water by the patrol craft Monsoon. Tucker
leaves behind a wife and 3-year-old daughter. He was
buried in his hometown March 15; a memorial service
was held at Little Creek two days later.