MARTY, MINN. – As a pilot with the Minnesota National Guard, Chief Warrant Officer 2 Charlie Nord couldn't believe he was lucky enough to fly helicopters.
"When you're one of the dudes on the ground and you see the pilot, everyone looks up," said Parker Carignan, Nord's longtime friend. "Charlie was excited to be that person who everyone looked up to."
Nord was piloting a UH-60 Black Hawk on a routine maintenance test flight Thursday afternoon when it crashed in trees lining the edge of a snowy Stearns County farm field. The 30-year-old pilot from northwestern Minnesota was killed along with two other soldiers on board.
They were identified in a tweet by the Minnesota National Guard on Saturday morning as Chief Warrant Officer 2 James A. Rogers Jr., 28, and Sgt. Kort M. Plantenberg, 28. All three soldiers were assigned to Company C, 2-211th General Support Aviation Battalion, based in St. Cloud.
They had returned in May from a nine-month deployment to the Middle East, where they conducted medical evacuations in support of Operation Spartan Shield and Operation Inherent Resolve.
"They paid the ultimate price in their service," Gov. Tim Walz, a 24-year member in the Army National Guard, said in a prepared statement. "Words will never ease the pain of this tragic loss, and the state of Minnesota is forever in the debt of these warriors."
Nord never talked about the dangers of flying, said Carignan, a veteran of the Army's 101st Airborne Division. "He knew his skills would keep him up in the air."
But Thursday, something went very wrong.