Houston Chronicle

3 die, 4 rescued in Grand Canyon helicopter crash

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Three people are killed and four rushed to a Nevada hospital with life-threatenin­g injuries after a tour helicopter crashes into the Grand Canyon.

GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. — Four survivors of a deadly tour helicopter crash onto the jagged rocks of the Grand Canyon were being treated at a Nevada hospital on Sunday while crews tackled difficult terrain in a remote area to try to recover the bodies of three other people.

Six British tourists and a pilot were on board the Papillon Grand Canyon Helicopter­s chopper when it crashed under unknown circumstan­ces on Saturday evening on the Hualapai Nation’s land near Quartermas­ter Canyon, by the Grand Canyon’s West Rim. A witness said he saw flames and black smoke spewing from the crash site, heard explosions and saw victims who were bleeding and badly burned.

“It’s just horrible,” witness Teddy Fujimoto said. “And those victims — she was so badly burned. It’s unimaginab­le, the pain.”

Windy conditions, darkness and the rugged terrain made it difficult to reach the helicopter’s wreckage, Hualapai Nation police Chief Francis Bradley said. Rescue crews had to fly in, walk to the crash site and use night vision goggles to find their way around, he said.

The survivors — three passengers and the pilot — were airlifted to a Las Vegas hospital by 2 a.m. Sunday, Bradley said.

Authoritie­s didn’t immediatel­y release the names or ages of the victims.

National Transporta­tion Safety Board officials and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion will be investigat­ing the crash of the Eurocopter EC130.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ists in Flagstaff and Phoenix said winds were blowing an estimated 10 mph with gusts of 20 mph around the time of the crash.

Fujimoto, a Las Vegas photograph­er who was doing a wedding shoot at the time of the crash, said he suddenly saw people running toward the edge of a gulch. He said he heard gasps and went to check out the commotion coming from about 600 feet below.

“In the gulch, there was a helicopter, flames, smoke,” he said. “It was horrible.”

He said that’s when two or three small explosions went off in the wreckage and people weren’t sure what to do. He said some other pilots flying helicopter­s in the area at the time of the crash descended into the gulch and delivered water and first aid supplies.

Fujimoto said he saw two badly injured women and one of them was yelling out a man’s name. He said one of them “was pretty much burned all over.”

“Her hands were bloody and body was just more burned,” Fujimoto said. The other woman, he said, was “covered in blood” and was bleeding from her head or neck.

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