Belfast Telegraph

Search teams hope low tide will aid hunt for helicopter

- BY BRIAN HUTTON

A MASSIVE search for three rescuers missing after an Irish Coast Guard helicopter crashed into the Atlantic is focusing on a “three-hour window” tomorrow to find the aircraft amid fierce weather conditions.

Organisers hope a critically timed operation between low tides will lead them to the Sikorsky S92 and the bodies of three men who have not been found since the aircraft disappeare­d without warning off Co Mayo early on Tuesday morning.

The search has been narrowed to a 100-metre by 80-metre section of the ocean around Blackrock lighthouse, around 13km offshore from Blacksod, where the aircraft was intended to land to refuel moments before it vanished.

The detection of a black box signal in that area has buoyed hopes that the bulk of the wreckage can be found along with the three remaining crew members.

Declan Geoghegan of the Irish Coast Guard, said the likelihood is that the black box recorder is still attached to the helicopter and it was also more likely than not that the missing crew members are still inside.

“If you look at helicopter crashes, 92 or 93% of the time the bodies are found within the wreckage of the fuselage, it is so small,” he said.

“The other thing is that they are either strapped in or tethered — one or the other.”

Captain Dara Fitzpatric­k (45), the only one of the crew to be recovered so far, was found critically ill in the water on Tuesday and later died.

The highly experience­d and ground-breaking pilot, well known to Irish television audiences for her role in a fly-onthe-wall documentar­y about the Coast Guard, was the mother of a three-year-old son.

Her funeral will be held at Glencullen in south county Dublin this morning. The other three crew, who have yet to be found, are chief pilot Mark Duffy from Dundalk, Co Louth; as well as Ciaran Smith and Paul Ormsby, both winchmen from north Co Dublin.

It is hoped if tomorrow’s tightly managed operation to try and locate the helicopter is successful, then a “bigger window” will be available on Monday during which divers or remotely operated underwater vehicles will be deployed to the wreckage.

The Commission­er Of Irish Lights ship the Granuaile, which is equipped with a heavy lifting crane, is being loaded with equipment at Galway as it makes its way to the scene.

Two naval ships, Garda RIB boats and trawlers, with local fishermen who have expert knowledge of the waters, will be used to mount tomorrow’s operation.

The underwater terrain, part of the lighthouse rock, and dangerous underwater currents in the area are adding to difficulti­es.

 ??  ?? The scene at Blacksod yesterday as the search for the downed helicopter continues
The scene at Blacksod yesterday as the search for the downed helicopter continues

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