Navy
Abandons Ship
Congressional intervention talks Navy into letting mechanic keep the
Corsair wreck
Last month we told
you about vintage aircraft enthusiast Lex Cralley being sued by the Navy
for his actions in digging up the wreck of a Brewster F3A-1 Corsair that
crashed during a training flight in 1944.
The Minneapolis
Star Tribune is reporting that the Navy has yielded to congressional
pressure and has agreed to allow Cralley to keep what was left of the
Corsair. Sixty years after Lt. Robin C. Pennington bailed out of the
aircraft during a training mission that began at MCAS Cherry Point in
NC, and in which he failed, for unknown reasons, to pull the ripcord on
his parachute, the issue has been settled.
Cralley, an airline
ground services mechanic, decided to dig up what was left of the Corsair
in Craven County, NC, in 1991. He then took it home to Minnesota, where
he began the process of trying to restore it. However, the Justice
Department, on behalf of the Navy, sued him in March, claiming they
wanted the aircraft back. To add insult to injury, the Justice
Department accused Cralley of stealing the airplane.
Rep. Walter Jones,
R-(NC), found out about the lawsuit, and decided to help Cralley by
asking the Navy to drop the lawsuit and let him keep the wreck. Rep.
Jones said last week that Alberto Mora, the Navy's top lawyer, has
agreed to do just that, much to Cralley's relief.
"It was a whole lot
more work to retain the plane than to obtain it," said Cralley. He also
thanked Rep. Jones for helping him to get the issue resolved in his
favor. After government attorneys and a vintage aircraft appraiser
inspected the wreck, Cralley was shown the draft of the congressional
amendment, expected to pass the House and Senate this summer, which
would cede title of the Corsair to him.
From our news associate
www.aero-new.net |