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Remains of Ohio airmen killed in crash over Iraq to return to U.S. in dignified transfer

The remains of the three Ohio airmen killed in an air refueling mission over western Iraq last week will return to the U.S. through a dignified transfer Wednesday.

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Remains of Ohio airmen killed in crash over Iraq to return to U.S. in dignified transfer

DANIELLE DINDAK. WLWT. NEWS 5. DANIELLE, THANKS SO MUCH FOR THE UPDATE THERE. IN OTHER NEWS, TONIGHT, A LOCAL COMMUNITY GRIEVING ONE OF ITS OWN. CAPTAIN COURTIS ANGST WAS AMONG THE SIX AIRMEN WHO DIED LAST WEEK IN AN AIRCRAFT OVER WESTERN IRAQ. ANGST WAS A WILMINGTON, WILMINGTON NATIVE WHO SPENT HIS LIFE CHASING HIS DREAM OF FLYING AND SERVING HIS COUNTRY. WLWT NEWS FIVE’S KAREN JOHNSON LIVE IN WILMINGTON TONIGHT WITH HOW THE 30 YEAR OLD IS BEING REMEMBERED. HI, KAREN. GOOD EVENING. HEARTS ARE HEAVY TONIGHT HERE IN WILMINGTON, WHERE CAPTAIN COURTIS IS BEING REMEMBERED FOR HIS SERVICE AND SACRIFICE THAT TOOK HIM HALFWAY AROUND THE WORLD. THE SMILE SHOWS UP IN JUST ABOUT EVERY PHOTO, WHETHER IN A COCKPIT, TRAVELING OR BESIDE HIS WIFE, MARY. LOVED ONES, SAY CAPTAIN COURTIS ANGST CARRIED THAT SAME JOY EVERYWHERE HE WENT. THE 30 YEAR OLD WILMINGTON NATIVE WAS ONE OF SIX SERVICE MEMBERS KILLED WHEN A KC 135 AIRCRAFT CRASHED DURING AN AIR FUELING MISSION OVER WESTERN IRAQ LAST WEEK. THE FALLEN SERVICE MEMBERS WERE PART OF THE 121ST AIR REFUELING WING, BASED AT RICKENBACKER AIR FORCE BASE IN COLUMBUS. AS SOON AS WE SAW THE RICKENBACKER, I WORRIED PERSONALLY THAT MAYBE IT WAS SOMEBODY LOCAL. LAST YEAR, MEMBERS OF ANGST UNIT TRAINED AT THE WILMINGTON AIR PARK. RECONNECTING WITH A COMMUNITY WHERE MILITARY AVIATION HAS LONG BEEN PART OF LOCAL HISTORY. KIND OF A NOSTALGIC VISIT, PROBABLY FOR SOME OF THE AIR PEOPLE, AND CERTAINLY WAS FOR WILMINGTON. WHAT WAS ONCE A PROUD HOMECOMING NOW CARRIES NEW PAIN, AND THE LOSS FEELS PERSONAL ANGST. WAS A 2014 GRADUATE OF WILMINGTON HIGH SCHOOL, A DISTRICT WHERE HIS MOTHER STILL WORKS. GAVE UP TWO LIVES. REALLY THE ONE HE’S LIVING OR WAS LIVING NOW AND THEN. THE FUTURE LIFE THAT HE WOULD HAVE WITH HIS FAMILY. AND IT’S SO PAINFUL WHEN YOU THINK ABOUT IT BECAUSE YOU RELATE TO YOUR OWN FAMILIES. AND IT COULD HAVE BEEN ANYBODY, BUT UNFORTUNATELY, IT WAS COURTIS AND OUR HEARTS ARE JUST BROKEN FOR HIM AND HIS FAMILY. SAYS THIS AIRMAN DIED DOING WHAT HE LOVED MOST FLYING AND SERVING ALONGSIDE PEOPLE HE CARED ABOUT DEEPLY. AND WILMINGTON’S MAYOR DOES KNOW THE ANGST FAMILY PERSONALLY. FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS HAVE NOT YET BEEN SET. AS FOR THE CRASH ITSELF, MILITARY PERSONNEL CONTINUE TO INVESTIGATE TO TRY AND DETERMINE A CAUSE. REPORTING LIVE TONIGHT IN WILMINGTON, KAR

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Remains of Ohio airmen killed in crash over Iraq to return to U.S. in dignified transfer

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Updated: 6:16 PM CDT Mar 17, 2026

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The remains of the three Ohio airmen killed in an air refueling mission over Iraq will return to the U.S. through a dignified transfer on Wednesday. Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine shared he will be traveling to Dover Air Force Base to pay his respects to the service members.The three Ohio airmen were among the six killed in the crash last Thursday. The Ohio Air National Guard members have been identified as 38-year-old Capt. Seth R. Koval of Mooresville, Indiana, 30-year-old Capt. Curtis J. Angst of Wilmington, Ohio, and a 28-year-old Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons of Columbus, Ohio.The crash also claimed the lives of three members of the Air Force’s 6th Air Refueling Wing, including Tech Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt is a 34-year-old mother of two.Angst’s family says he died doing what he loved most: flying and serving alongside the people he cared deeply about. Funeral arrangements have not been announced, and military officials continue to work to determine what caused the crash.U.S. Central Command said the circumstances of the crash are under investigation but that the loss of the aircraft was “not due to hostile or friendly fire.”

The remains of the three Ohio airmen killed in an air refueling mission over Iraq will return to the U.S. through a dignified transfer on Wednesday.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine shared he will be traveling to Dover Air Force Base to pay his respects to the service members.

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The three Ohio airmen were among the six killed in the crash last Thursday.

The Ohio Air National Guard members have been identified as 38-year-old Capt. Seth R. Koval of Mooresville, Indiana, 30-year-old Capt. Curtis J. Angst of Wilmington, Ohio, and a 28-year-old Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons of Columbus, Ohio.

The crash also claimed the lives of three members of the Air Force’s 6th Air Refueling Wing, including Tech Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt is a 34-year-old mother of two.

Angst’s family says he died doing what he loved most: flying and serving alongside the people he cared deeply about. Funeral arrangements have not been announced, and military officials continue to work to determine what caused the crash.

U.S. Central Command said the circumstances of the crash are under investigation but that the loss of the aircraft was “not due to hostile or friendly fire.”

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8:13 pm, Mar 17, 2026
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