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Sailor thought dead after falling overboard was actually hiding out in the ship's engine room

The man-overboard incident triggered a massive search by both US and Japanese personnel that spanned 5,500 square miles.

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A sailor on the USS Shiloh who was presumed dead after falling overboard was actually hiding out in one of the ship's engine rooms for the past week, David Larter of Navy Times reports.

Gas Turbine Systems Technician (Mechanical) 3rd Class Peter Mims was thought to have fallen off the Shiloh roughly 180 miles east of Okinawa, Japan, on June 8. The man-overboard incident triggered a massive search by US and Japanese personnel that spanned 5,500 square miles.

Mims was presumed dead after three days of fruitless searching. It would have been the second such incident in recent days, after another sailor fell off the USS Normandy.

The Navy's 7th Fleet said in a statement on its website that Mims was found alive on board the ship and would be transferred to the USS Ronald Reagan for medical care.

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"We are thankful to have found our missing shipmate and appreciate all the hard work of our sailors and Japanese partners in searching for him," Rear Adm. Charles Williams, the commander of Carrier Strike Group 5 and Task Force 70, said in the statement. "I am relieved that this sailor's family will not be joining the ranks of Gold Star Families that have sacrificed so much for our country."

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