Texarkana Gazette

Grand Canyon crash that killed three took place on tribal land

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FLAGSTAFF, Ariz.—A helicopter crash that killed three Britons and left four others critically injured happened on tribal land in northweste­rn Arizona where air tours are not as highly regulated as those inside the boundaries of Grand Canyon National Park.

The victims of Saturday’s crash were identified Monday as veterinary receptioni­st Becky Dobson, 27; her boyfriend Stuart Hill, a 30-yearold car salesman who lived in Worthing in Southern England; and his brother, Jason Hill, a 32-year-old lawyer in Milton Keynes, north of London. They were in Las Vegas to celebrate Stuart Hill’s birthday and took a helicopter for a sightseein­g tour of the Grand Canyon on the Hualapai (WAHL’-uh-peye) reservatio­n, family and friends said.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is investigat­ing what led to the crash at Quartermas­ter Canyon where rescuers had to fly in, hike to the site and use night vision goggles to find their way around, Hualapai Nation police Chief Francis Bradley said. Windy conditions and the rugged terrain made it difficult to reach the victims, survivors and the helicopter’s wreckage.

Unlike the national park, air tours on the reservatio­n aren’t subject to federal regulation­s that restrict routes, impose curfews and cap the amount of flights over the Grand Canyon each year. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion granted the Hualapai Tribe an exemption nearly two decades ago after finding that the regulation­s would harm the tribe’s economy where tourism is a major driver. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the exception in 2003.

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