Imperial Valley Press

Sheriffs accused of poaching fire rescue calls

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SANTA ANA (AP) — Orange County Sheriff’s Department helicopter­s have been poaching rescue calls sent to the Fire Authority for several months in a costly and potentiall­y dangerous turf war, officials said.

Pilots from the two department­s bickered and a sheriff’s pilot ignored direct orders to stand off during two rescues on April 29, the Orange County Register reported Friday.

“It has to be resolved before there’s a terrible incident,” county Supervisor Todd Spitzer said.

In the latest confrontat­ion, helicopter­s from both department­s arrived in Laguna Beach to airlift a drunken 17-year-old boy from a sea cave.

The incident commander in charge of the operation told the sheriff’s pilot “you are not requested” and declared the pilot was creating “an unsafe air operation,” according to recorded radio chatter cited by the Register.

A dispatcher told a fire official: “It sounds like the sheriffs have gone rogue.”

The sheriff’s pilot eventually responded: “We’re going to do whatever is best to not delay patient care” and rescued the youth.

A sheriff’s helicopter also answered a medical assistance call to the fire department that same day in Orange and conducted the operation despite a direct order not to interfere, the paper said.

The Sheriff’s Department is investigat­ing the Laguna Beach incident, spokesman Lt. Lane Lagaret said. He declined to comment on why sheriff’s pilots are responding to fire calls.

Uncoordina­ted responses by helicopter­s from different agencies potentiall­y pose a danger to the pilots and those on the ground.

In 1987, helicopter­s from Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police department­s collided while responding to a police chase.

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