Florida crew recounts ‘miraculous’ Atlantic plane rescue with fuel low
A Florida-based military rescue crew successfully saved all 11 Bahamian adults from a plane crash in the Atlantic Ocean, approximately 80 miles east of Melbourne. The survivors had been adrift in a life raft for about five hours when the 920th Rescue Wing arrived.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA Florida-based military rescue crew successfully saved all 11 Bahamian adults from a plane crash in the Atlantic Ocean, approximately 80 miles east of Melbourne. The survivors had been adrift in a life raft for about five hours when the 920th Rescue Wing arrived. The rescue operation, conducted in choppy seas and with an approaching thunderstorm, involved multiple helicopter lifts. The pilot of the rescue helicopter revealed they had only five minutes of fuel remaining when the last survivor was hoisted to safety. The aircraft, a Beechcraft twin-propeller plane, was on an internal flight between Bahamian islands when it ditched. The cause of the emergency is under investigation.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedMaj Elizabeth Piowaty stated that surviving a ditching in the ocean is 'pretty miraculous'.
The survivors were in a life raft for about five hours before rescue.
The rescue helicopter had only five minutes of fuel remaining when the last survivor was hoisted.
A military rescue crew saved all 11 people from a plane crash in the Atlantic Ocean.
The plane was on an internal flight between Marsh Harbour and Grand Bahama when it ditched.