Air base and local fire department crews were soon on the scene, followed by chaplains and identification teams. A temporary
morgue was set up as victims were retrieved from the wreckage. USAF Staff Sergeant Robert D. Vess, who was driving from Tokyo with his wife, was about away when he saw the aircraft lose control and crash, stating: Vess immediately pulled over and ran to the crash site. He pulled the aircraft's radio operator, John H. Jordan Jr., from the wreckage, but Jordan died a few minutes later. Vess then continued to help search for survivors until the aircraft's fuel tanks exploded. Also helping to pull bodies from the wreckage was American missionary Reverend Henry McCune, who lived nearby. His son Jonathan took pictures of the wreckage with his Brownie box camera. At 16:50, Tachikawa GCA called the
36th Air Rescue Squadron at
Johnson Air Base to the crash site. Lieutenant Colonel Theodore P. Tatum Jr., his co-pilot, and a two-man pararescue team arrived on the scene via helicopter at 17:13; their subsequent inspection confirmed that there were no survivors. One of the victims, Carl C. Steele, was found in a wing compartment behind the no. 1 engine, possibly having been burned while examining it. == Investigation ==