Imperial Valley Press

1 Houston police o cer killed, 1 injured in helicopter crash

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HOUSTON (AP) — A Houston police helicopter crashed early Saturday, killing one of the two o cers on board and critically injuring the other, while assisting a call to search for bodies in a nearby bayou, officials said.

A pilot and tactical flight o cer were aboard a police helicopter when it crashed at an apartment complex around 2 a.m. They were flown to a hospital where the tactical flight officer died, police Chief Art Acevedo said hours after the crash during a news conference where he was joined by the city’s mayor, Sylvester Turner.

The department the officer who died as Tactical Flight O cer Jason Knox. He is survived by a wife and two young children, who were at the hospital along with his parents and in-laws, Acevedo said.

“We’re going to miss him,” Acevedo said. “He had a heart of gold, integrity second to none.”

No cause for the crash was given and Acevedo said the National Transporta­tion Board and the

Federal Aviation Administra­tion would investigat­e while Houston police conduct a separate homicide investigat­ion.

Acevedo noted that shots rang out across the street from the scene at around 3 a. m. and six people were taken into custody.

The crash investigat­ion would explore whether the helicopter was struck by gunfire, Acevedo said, noting instances in his previous work in Austin and California when police helicopter­s were fired upon.

The pilot, Senior Police Officer Chase Cormier, was “very banged up,” and had serious injuries, but was conscious Saturday afternoon. There were no injuries to anyone on the ground at the apartment complex, a masked Acevedo told reporters.

The helicopter was supposed to assist with a search for bodies in a nearby bayou, which was prompted by a tip that the police chief characteri­zed as “probably a bogus call — we don’t know.”

“No evidence to date of any bodies in the bayou,”

Acevedo said.

The officers were trapped in “mangled” wreckage and it took firefighte­rs about an hour to cut them out, Acevedo said. The helicopter did not catch fire and avoided striking occupied apartment buildings. It did clip the Biscayne at Cityview apartment complex’s clubhouse.

The police department is shutting down flights until it has a chance to reassess in the coming days, and will be relying on the Texas Department of Public Safety and Harris County Sheri ’s O ce for flight support in the interim.

Acevedo identified the helicopter as “75 Fox.”

“It’s pretty ironic that yesterday we graduated a class and we had Fox fly out because we had COVID, so we couldn’t do your traditiona­l graduation so we wanted to do something special,” Acevedo said. “And if somebody had told me that a few hours later that we had an aircraft down and we’d lose a really good man, I would have said ‘No way.’”

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