Photo Album of Bianchi, Kevin Albert, CDR
 
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Sigonella Pays Tribute To Fallen HC-4 Crew
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from  2002-2003, 131X, HC-4 Black Stallions/Gallant Blades  album
SIGONELLA, Sicily The mourners gathered around the tables to look at the photographs. Cmdr. Kevin A. Bianchi dancing with his wife. Lt. Peter Ober racing his blue ZX-9R motorcycle. Petty Officer 1st Class Brian P. Gibson flashing his ever-present smile from a helicopter. Childhood images of Petty Officer 3rd Class Samuel Cox playing the piano. The four men died July 16 when their MH-53E Sea Dragon crashed 10 miles from Naval Air Station Sigonella. The crash is under investigation. On Wednesday, a sea of people in dress whites walked across the base. About 800 people, including relatives from the States, packed a hangar to honor the sailors from Heavy Helicopter Combat Support Squadron Four. The men's children clutched squadron coins, the women held flowers, as speakers remembered the Sailors from the "Black Stallions" squadron. Afterward, mourners lined the base street. Sailors stood at attention and relatives held one another as cars passed with the Sailors' remains. Several of their friends and family members talked about them later during interviews. Bianchi, the squadron's Executive Officer, who turned 40 the day before he died, was to become the Commanding Officer in November. "I couldn't wait for him to be my CO," said Lt. Greg Baumgartner, 27, echoing several others' sentiments. "He just loved to [hang out] with us." The good-natured Maplewood, N.J., native debated with anyone about anything. He also worked out faithfully. "He came to the [squadron] birthday party, put on workout clothes and went out and ran, then came back," smiled LT Ike Kraushaar, 29. "I've never seen anyone as well-rounded as he was, and I've never seen a man sweat as much as he did," Baumgartner laughed, describing how it took a mop to clean up the treadmill after Bianchi was through with it. Bianchi was perpetually energetic, said his wife, Rita Barrie. "He couldn't stand the fact you had to sleep. He said there were so many other things you could be doing," she said. "... He was always wanting more flight time. He died doing what he loved." She said her husband was a religious man, and his children were his life: Kevin, called K2, 9; Christopher, 6; and Julia, 3. Ober, 27, left behind a wife and 4-year-old daughter. The pilot loved racing his motorcycle. The Jacksonville, Fla., native also was quite the wrestler, which he proved during a detachment to the United Arab Emirates. "Everyone wanted a shot at him because he'd never been pinned down before," said Petty Officer 2nd Class Albert Snipes, 22. Ober consecutively pinned all his challengers, about 10 members of the detachment team. He was finally pinned when the guys ganged up on him at once. "He was such a good sport," Snipes said. "A lot of guys would've been upset but he ... shook everybody's hand." Baumgartner, Ober's friend for four years, said Ober was very close to his family. During a 10-week detachment, all Ober talked about was his wife and daughter, he said. Friends said Ober was an exceptional pilot and especially good at hovering. "He had a natural instinct for the aircraft," Snipes said. Sailors said they also looked forward to working with Gibson, whom they called Gibby. "He always walked around with a smile. ... He could be in a bad mood and you wouldn't know," said Petty Officer 1st Class David Zehner, 28. Gibson, 33, an aviation structural mechanic, liked to bowl and spent a lot of time with his Italian wife, Daniela. "He was consumed with his Italian lifestyle and family," said Petty Officer 1st Class Ryan Fitzgerald, 27. The Richmond, Va., native was the leading petty officer for team B's work center, where he put in long hours. "He wouldn't yell at his subordinates," Fitzgerald said. "He was watchful, careful. He just cared.... The only reason I'm getting right back in the aircraft is because of Gibby's positive outlook on everything." The other enlisted crew member on the crashed helicopter was Cox, 21, an aviation electrician's mate. Friends called Cox "the admiral" because he was leaving in September for the University of Missouri as part of the Seaman to Admiral Program. He wanted to be a jet pilot. "Even though he knew he was leaving, he still did everything he could every day," said Petty Officer 2nd Class Nickolas Chapo, 24. Petty Officer 3rd Class Sandra Anderson, 22, enjoyed joking with the Duluth, Minn., native. He teased her for being from Iowa and would yell the Minnesota State College fight song at her. "He was like an annoying little brother," she said. Cox was teased for walking on his tiptoes and always finding a way to get dirty. The voracious reader ordered at least a book a day online while in the United Arab Emirates. "You could be talking about anything, and he would know a fact about it," Chapo said. Cox's mother, Jo Thornley Cox, said she always had a feeling her son wouldn't live to old age. She and other family members visited the field where the men died. "I couldn't hold him when he died," she said, her voice catching. "That's the closest I could be to the moment of his passing. ... I feel it's holy ground now. It's where four souls returned to God." Amen.
posted By Bianchi, Kevin Albert, CDR
Jan 29, 2009
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