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Marine who died trying to save crew in fiery Osprey crash to receive service's top noncombat medal

A Virginia family whose son made the ultimate sacrifice for his V-22 Osprey crew will be honored with the Navy and Marine Corps' highest noncombat honors.

WASHINGTON — Alexia and Bart Collart braced for a hard visit. Marines came to their home in Arlington, Virginia, last week to brief them on what caused the Osprey crash in Australia last year that resulted in the death of their son and two other Marines.

But they weren't expecting to hear these words: Your son didn't die in the crash.

Cpl. Spencer R. Collart had safely escaped the aircraft. But the 21-year-old saw that the Osprey's two pilots were unaccounted for. Despite the smoke and flames, he went back in.

Collart "heroically reentered the burning cockpit of the aircraft in an attempt to rescue the trapped pilots," the official Marine Corps investigation into the crash found. "He perished during this effort."

For his valor, Collart will be posthumously awarded the service's highest noncombat award: the Navy and Marine Corps Medal. It is an honor awarded for acts of heroism at great risk to the service member's life.

It didn't surprise his dad that Spencer tried to save the pilots.

"I heard a song the other day. I've heard it many times," Bart Collart said. "There was a quote in there, about how 'the last thing on my mind was to leave you.' And I think that was Spencer talking with me a little. He had no intention of leaving us. I think he thought he'd go in and get the job done."

RELATED: Lawmakers told troubled V-22 Osprey won't return to unrestricted flight status until mid-2025

Spencer Collart was a goal-driven, 6-foot-2, grinning Washington-Liberty High School lacrosse player who walked into the house on his 18th birthday with a surprise: He'd just enlisted.

"The Marines are the top of the top. The best of the best," Spencer told his mom Alexia Collart, when she asked him why. The Collarts weren't a military family, but Spencer wanted to serve. And he wanted to fly.

He got his top assignment choice and met his two best friends, Lance Cpl. Evan Strickland and Cpl. Jonah Waser. They spent a year together training to become crew chiefs, enlisted Marines responsible for the aircraft and its passengers. There's a photo of them posing with their class on April 22, 2022, the day they earned their wings.

They were flying the V-22 Osprey, which functions as both an airplane and a helicopter. But it's an aircraft that has a troubled history and four fatal accidents in two years.

Credit: dvidshub.net
V-22 Osprey

In June 2022, Strickland was killed along with four other Marines in a training crash in California. Collart served as a pallbearer. He stayed in close touch with Strickland's family, calling to check on them, Facetiming them on the crash anniversary, and reading the accident investigation report from cover to cover, Strickland's mother, Michelle, said.

"He wanted to really understand," she said.

When Spencer's unit deployed to Australia in April 2023, he asked his mother if he could give Michelle Strickland her number so they could text each other.

"He had the foresight to connect me with Michelle. I don't know if he was concerned or worried. I suspect maybe he was," Alexia Collart said.

Still, Spencer flourished in his role. He took on hard jobs no one wanted, like packing the unit's plane before they deployed. His squadron kept showing up with more gear, so he kept unpacking and repacking it, again and again.

By the fourth try Spencer was "red and black, just covered in grease and sunburn," his commander told Bart Collart. Spencer earned a first-class ticket to Australia for his effort.

In the Osprey, Spencer spent most of the flight in the "tunnel," the area right behind the pilot and co-pilot, learning from them, with a goal to become a pilot himself. When Spencer's personal effects arrived after his death, Bart Collart found his son's Marine Corps camouflage cap, known as a cover. He put it on and metal nudged his forehead.

Spencer had pinned a 2nd lieutenant's gold "butter bar" and a set of pilot's wings into the band.

"He put these in here to remind himself every time he put his cap on of his next goal," Bart Collart said. "He was all in. He walked the walk, he talked the talk, and he was just, he just loved it so much."

On August 27, 2023, two Marines came to the Collart's door.

Spencer Collart's Osprey had crashed during an Australian military exercise, killing him and Capt. Eleanor LeBeau and aircraft commander Maj. Tobin Lewis. For months, that's all his parents knew. Then, last week, the Marines came back, to brief their findings.

Credit: AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.
Marine Cpl. Spencer Collart and his fellow marines, Marine Corps Capt. Eleanor LeBeau, bottom left, and Marine Corps Major Tobin Lewis, bottom right.

Seconds after the Osprey hit the ground, the aircraft filled with smoke and flames. Collart had been standing in the tunnel even as the plane was going down. Most of the 23 troops on board escaped out the back, including a commander who told investigators he saw Collart escape out a side door.

A site team later found Collart's tether — what he'd use to latch onto the Osprey to move around during flight — undamaged outside the aircraft.

But not everyone made it out. The pilots were still inside. The Osprey had crashed nose first, and they were trapped.

Collart went back. Investigators believe he may have unbuckled Lewis from his restraints before he succumbed.

Collart "thought the world" of Lewis and LeBeau, Bart Collart said. He believes Lewis' last-minute maneuver to level the plane as it was crashing right side down helped the troops in the back survive.

RELATED: Japan Osprey crash caused by cracks in a gear and pilot's decision to keep flying, Air Force says

The fourth member of the flight crew, Cpl. Travis Reyes, has been at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio for the last year recovering from critical injuries. Saturday marked the first time he got to fly home to his parents' house in Maryland.

Spencer's family met Waser for the first time at the funeral. This time it was Waser who put on dress blues to serve as a pallbearer and escort his best friend's remains from Dover Air Force Base to Arlington National Cemetery.

Spencer's younger sister, Gwyneth Collart, felt instant chemistry. Her parents saw it too.

"As soon as I met him, I was like, this is not the time or the place to be falling in love," Gwyneth Collart said of Waser. "Grieving will never be easy, but he made grieving a little bit more comfortable to do. And he just, I mean, he took my breath away."

Months later, Waser asked her father for Gwyneth's hand.

"You guys told me that Marines work fast, and you weren't kidding," Bart Collart said, laughing.

Gwyneth Collart and Waser married July 6 in Arlington and held their reception at Top of the Town, a ballroom that has a terrace overlooking Arlington National Cemetery. They could see the section where Spencer was buried, and Gwyneth pinned her brother's portrait to her bouquet.

"I think that Spencer knew what I needed and what my family needed after this, and it feels like I got exactly what I needed to get through this," Gwyneth Collart said.

Credit: Tell It Well Photography via AP
Gwyneth Collart, left, and Cpl. Jonah Waser at the alter during their wedding, July 6, 2024, in Arlington, Va.

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