The U.S. Air Force has officially released the names of the eight crew members who were killed when a B-52 Stratofortress went down [1] shortly after takeoff from Edwards Air Force Base in California.
The tragedy has sent shockwaves through the Air Force community and across the wider military family.
According to base officials, the crew consisted of five active-duty Air Force service members and three civilians working in concert during a routine training mission.
The bomber, a workhorse of the U.S. strategic fleet for decades, crashed around 11:20 a.m. Pacific time on June 15. Emergency crews responded quickly, but the devastation was total.
Col. Thomas Tauer, commander of the 412th Test Wing, issued a somber statement honoring the fallen, saying, “These airmen were more than coworkers. They were friends, mentors, teammates and valued members of our Edwards and Air Force family.”
He emphasized the base’s immediate focus was to support the families of those lost and ensure every resource was made available to help them through this unimaginable loss.
Among those killed were Lt. Col. Gabriel Estrella, 40, of the Air Force Operational Test and Evaluation Center; Maj. Alexander Davis, 34, of the 419th Flight Test Squadron; Maj. Robert Dee, 40, and Maj. Brad Hovey, 35, both pilots from the 419th Flight Test Squadron; Col. Greg Watson, 53, a Boeing employee [2] and Air Force reservist; retired Lt. Col. Miles Middleton, 50, also a Boeing employee [2]; Jeromy Smith, 32, a flight test engineer; and Christopher Rischar, 41, a contractor with JT4.
Each man represented the very best of the Air Force’s tradition of courage, precision, and dedication. They served in an unforgiving profession where technical excellence meets split-second decision-making, all in the defense of America’s skies.

The nation is reminded that these warriors risk their lives not only in combat, but also in the essential testing, evaluation, and advancement of the aircraft that keep our warfighters dominant.
The Air Force stated that the cause of the crash remains under investigation, with the airfield at Edwards still closed while recovery and analysis operations are underway.
The crash occurred during a “routine training flight,” the sort that has been conducted countless times at the storied desert base—a test and training ground for the most advanced aircraft on Earth.
This tragedy marks the deadliest B-52 incident since 1982, when nine airmen lost their lives during a simulated combat flight near Mather Air Force Base.
The loss serves as a grim reminder that even during training, service to this nation demands ultimate sacrifice. Every takeoff in service of readiness carries inherent risk, but that risk is accepted with courage few outside the uniformed world can truly grasp.
Recent months have been marked by an unsettling uptick in aviation mishaps across the armed forces.

