As she sank, the pilot of the Japanese aircraft machine-gunned and bombed the survivors.
The pilots bombed the convoy and afterwards watched the survivors hide and alerted the rebels to where they were.
On April 18, 2002, an American pilot bombed Canadian forces involved in a training exercise, killing four and wounding eight Canadians.
Due to ground fog, he argues, the German pilots missed their targets and mistakenly bombed the town.
Tired from the long flights and showing a puckish sense of humor, the pilots bombed the French embassy by accident.
During the second conflict, an American pilot by the name of Patrick Murphy volunteered to bomb federal forces for the rebels, but mistakenly bombed Naco, Arizona instead.
The next event was to occur on 16 January 1915 when another solitary pilot from a German aerodrome in Belgium bombed Sittingbourne.
A jet plane crashed on an aircraft carrier and killed five people; a boiler room explosion left nine sailors with minor injuries, and a pilot bombed a Navy ship.
The 900 days of the siege of Leningrad began 50 years ago when pilots of the Luftwaffe bombed the food warehouses.
American pilots in twin-tailed F-15 Eagles bombed Scud launchers in western Iraq and said they had destroyed three of them.