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Photo: US Navy Ends Multi-Day Search for Missing Sailor in North Arabian Sea

© AP Photo / Hasan JamaliUS Navy sailor CW02 Ernest Jackson, 42, of San Diego, California, peers through binoculars from the bridge of the USS Nimitz on Tuesday, June 5, 2007, in the Persian Gulf, where the Nimitz and the USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier groups are on patrol
US Navy sailor CW02 Ernest Jackson, 42, of San Diego, California, peers through binoculars from the bridge of the USS Nimitz on Tuesday, June 5, 2007, in the Persian Gulf, where the Nimitz and the USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier groups are on patrol - Sputnik International
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Although the US Navy search for a missing service member has been called off, an investigation into the sailor’s disappearance in the North Arabian Sea remains ongoing, according to a Tuesday release from the US 5th Fleet.

“The US Navy has ended search and rescue efforts for Information Systems Technician 2nd Class Ian McKnight, assigned to USS Nimitz (CVN 68), who is believed to have gone overboard Sept. 6,” the release read.

“We are deeply saddened as we call off the search for IT2 Ian McKnight,” Capt. Max Clark, commanding officer of the Nimitz, expressed in the release.

US Air Force personnel previously joined members of the US Navy in their search in the North Arabian Sea.

Cmdr. Rebecca Rebarich, spokesperson for the Bahrain-based US 5th Fleet, told Stars and Stripes earlier this week that officials first conducted a muster and thoroughly searched for McKnight aboard the Nimitz, the oldest active US aircraft carrier, to no avail.

“The ships and aircraft have worked around the clock since the [search and rescue operations] commenced,” she explained, hours before the search was called off.

Her comments to the outlet came approximately 36 hours after a “man overboard” alert was sounded on the Nimitz. Rebarich detailed that both shore-based aircraft and personnel deployed aboard the Nimitz and the guided-missile cruiser USS Princeton took part in search and rescue operations.

Rebarich highlighted that McKnight has been labeled duty status whereabouts unknown (DUSTWUN), because while the reason for his absence is still to be determined, enough evidence has been provided for officials to believe it is not a case of voluntary “unauthorized absence,” which is the Navy equivalent of absent without leave (AWOL).

Navy guidelines provide a commander with up to 10 days to conduct search efforts for a DUSTWUN-labeled sailor. “As a result of that assessment, if the commander concludes that the
Sailor is missing, then and only then, shall the commander recommend that the person be placed in a ‘Missing’ status.”

Even if no remains are recovered, a DUSTWUN-labeled sailor may be listed as deceased if there is enough information to overcome “any reasonable doubt or logical possibility” that they may have survived.

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