Society's Child
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) said the Tornado GR4s, which each have a crew of two, were from RAF Lossiemouth, on the Moray coast.
One of the aircraft had been seen in the water and the other was classed as "missing", the MoD added.
The search for two missing crew stopped for the night at 10:45 BST due to bad weather, and will resume on Wednesday.
An MoD spokesman said: "The intention is to go back up tomorrow when the weather clears."
The RNLI said Wick, Invergordon and Buckie lifeboats were used to search for the missing pair.
The courtroom remarks were the first public disclosure by federal authorities since Carnel Chamberlain's body was discovered under his house last week on the Saginaw Chippewa Indian reservation, 70 miles north of Lansing.
No one has been charged with the boy's death. But Anthony Bennett, who was supposed to be watching Carnel on June 21, has been charged with assaulting him in late May or early June.

George Zimmerman says Trayvon Martin, 17, inflicted these scalp cuts by slamming his head on pavement. A medical report says that the cuts did not require stitches and that he suffered no serious head trauma.
The just-released document states he suffered a broken nose, but no deviation of the septum, and two black eyes, The Miami Herald says.
The report fills in details of the already reported injuries Zimmerman says he suffered the night of Feb. 26 when he shot and killed the 17-year-old Trayvon, who was visiting his father in Sanford, Fla.
Zimmerman went for the checkup the day after the killing only because he needed a doctor's note to return to work, a prosecutor said in court Friday during a new bail hearing.
Although Zimmerman's nose was broken, he twice rejected the physician assistant's recommendation that he see an ear, nose and throat specialist.

According to the government’s National Ocean Service, mermaids are not real, but at Florida’s famed Weeki Wachee Springs, ‘mermaid camp’ is real.
The National Ocean Service has declared that the mythical creatures do not exist after Animal Planet aired a seemingly realistic TV show in May about the half-human, half-fish sea creatures.
"No evidence of aquatic humanoids has ever been found," the service wrote in an article online.
The service decided to respond last week to inquiries from at least two confused viewers who watched the fictional show titled Mermaids: The Body Found and couldn't tell whether the creatures were real or not.
The statement, which describes mermaids' mythological origins, was written based on public knowledge because "mermaid science programs" do not exist, NOS spokesperson Carol Kavanagh told the BBC.
The rather unusual declaration comes on the heels of a similarly bizarre announcement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"It is as if someone sat at a desk and wrote a novel about a research idea," the committee wrote in a 29 June summary report posted in Japanese on the society's Web site.
The fabrications could produce a record number of retractions by a single author if the journals, as seems likely, decide to retract the papers. ScienceInsider was unable to reach Fujii, who had asked the society not to provide the media with his contact information.
Fujii's findings have been under a cloud since 8 March when an analysis in the journal Anaesthesia raised questions about his data. On 9 April, 23 journal editors publicly asked seven Japanese institutions named in the papers to investigate. The anesthesiology society took on the task because "it would have been difficult for any one institution to clarify what happened," says Koji Sumikawa, an anesthesiologist at Nagasaki University who headed the investigation.
The panel focused on 212 of 249 known Fujii papers. It tried to review the raw data, laboratory notebooks, and records on the patients or animal subjects involved. Committee members also interviewed relevant people.
Among the 172 papers judged bogus, the report claims that 126 studies of randomized, double-blind, controlled trials "were totally fabricated." The committee identified only three valid papers. For another 37 papers, the panel could not conclusively determine if there had been fabrication.
U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson in Amarillo issued the ruling during a bench trial for Clayton F. Osbon, noting he suffered from a "severe mental disease or defect." Osbon's attorney, Dean Roper, declined to comment.
Clayton F. Osbon, 49, has been charged with interfering with a flight crew, which is defined as assaulting or intimidating the crew, interfering with its duties or diminishing its ability to operate the plane.
Obson will go back to a federal mental health facility in Fort Worth for further examination, and is expected to be brought back to Amarillo for another hearing in August. The judge will decide then whether Osbon can be released or committed to a mental facility.

A survey said more than 11 million French people watch television programmes on computer screens, tablets or smart phones.
President François Hollande's Socialist government aims to raise an extra €7.5bn (£6bn) this year through tax rises included in an amended budget bill to be unveiled next week.
"Is it necessary to extend the fee to [computer] screens when you do not have a television? It is a question we're asking ourselves, but obviously it would be a fee per household and you would not have to pay an [additional] fee if you have a computer and a television," Aurélie Filippetti said on RTL radio.

Andre Marcel Adams was sentenced to life in prison in 2007 for murder.
Andre Marcel Adams, 39, is suspected of strangling Carlos Love at the Alger Correction Facility on May 31 but won't face charges at this time, Alger County Prosecutor Karen Bahrman announced in a written statement, according to local media reports.
Adams had been serving a life sentence at the maximum security prison in Munising, Mich., for a 2006 murder in Wayne County. He was transferred to Marquette Branch Prison after he was identified as a suspect in Love's slaying.
Bahrman said any sentence Adams might face upon conviction in Love's death wouldn't exceed his current life term.
"While it goes against every personal and professional instinct to do nothing about a chargeable murder, the fact remains that we cannot obtain additional consequences for the prospective defendant," Bahrman said, The Mining Journal reported Tuesday.

An oddity in the world’s atomic clocks caused problems with some big-name web operations on Saturday, including Reddit and Mozilla.
The "leap second" was added to the Coordinated Universal Time to adjust clocks to the earth's rotation the night of June 30, delaying for one second the transition to July 1.
A later message by Reddit attempted to make fun of the issue: "You ever wish you had an extra second or two? This is not one of those times."
Mozilla, the organization behind the Firefox browser, also had problems.
"Java is choking on leap second," said Mozilla engineer Eric Ziegenhorn, who noted that some services using the Java software platform were malfunctioning.
The outages came roughly at the same time as a major US storm which knocked out power to an Amazon data storage site which serves as cloud host for many websites, including Netflix.
Some sites such as the social network Foursquare said it was affected by the Amazon outage.
Admittedly inspired by Google, Twitter released on Monday its very first transparency report -- just two days before July 4th.
According to Twitter, the primary goal of the report is to shed more light on government requests received for user information, government requests received to withhold content, and DMCA takedown notices received from copyright holders. The report also provides insight into whether or not Twitter actually takes action on these requests.
"One of our goals is to grow Twitter in a way that makes us proud," the company said. "This ideal informs many of our policies and guides us in making difficult decisions. These policies help inform people, increase awareness and hold all involved parties -- including ourselves -- more accountable."
Twitter points out that it has received more government requests in the first half of 2012 than in the entirety of 2011. The United States shows to be the most nosy across the globe, flooding Twitter with 679 requests regarding 948 user accounts since January 2012. Twitter said it only complied with 75-percent of those requests.










Comment: The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted in 1948, provides, in Article 19, that: