Showing posts with label helipopter accident. Show all posts
Showing posts with label helipopter accident. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

NYPD Chopper Makes Emergency Landing By Brooklyn Field - NY1.com & NY Daily News

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A New York City Police Department helicopter needed to make an emergency landing by Floyd Bennett Field in Jamaica Bay, Brooklyn this afternoon.


Officials say all five people aboard are now safe.
Some aboard the chopper received minor injuries and were taken to hospitals for observation, according to police.
It is still not clear why the pilot had to set the helicopter down on the water.
The Coast Guard and the New York City Fire Department are also on the scene.


An 
NYPD helicopter made an emergency landing Wednesday near the department's aviation base in Brooklyn.
It was not clear what caused the aircraft to suddenly go down, but it appeared to land in Jamaica Bay near Floyd Bennett Field just before 4 p.m., FDNY officials said.
Five police officers were inside the chopper when it landed. There were no serious injuries.
In August of 2009, one of the helicopters in the NYPD fleet made two emergency landings in a three-day span. The first happened at a soccer field in Maspeth, Queens. The second happened in Prospect Park in Brooklyn.
Both incidents were attributed to a faulty indicator light in the chopper's control panel.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

South Ozone Park Man Crushed by Car by Howard Koplowitz - YourNabe.com

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A deacon at a South Ozone Park church was killed after he was crushed while working on his prized possession — a 1995 red Toyota Celica — the minister of the church said Tuesday.

Glenmore Miller, a 42-year-old electrician and deacon at the South Ozone Park Seventh-Day Adventist Church, was discovered dead under the car Monday morning, according to the church’s minister, the Rev. Richard Bryant.

“He was always into that car. He was always working on it,” Bryant said in a phone interview Tuesday. “For whatever reason, he wanted that particular car and he kept it.”

Members of Miller’s family, who gathered at his South Ozone Park home on Sutter Avenue, declined to comment.

Miller, who Bryant said became an ordained deacon about three years ago, was known for serving the church, even pitching in during renovations.

“He was loved by everybody,” Bryant said. “You never heard an unkind word of him. He really touched a lot of lives”

Miller was last seen alive Sunday and was found dead Monday.

Bryant said a jack holding up the 1995 red Toyota Celica Miller was working on gave way, crushing him.

He said it was not known whether Miller was killed instantly.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

AP News: NYC Tour Copter Plunges into River by Samantha Gross...

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NEW YORK (AP) -- A helicopter on a sightseeing tour of Manhattan made an emergency landing in the Hudson River on Saturday afternoon, leaving all eight people aboard drenched but not seriously harmed, authorities said.

The seven passengers and a pilot were pulled from the waters between Manhattan and New Jersey by two Good Samaritan vessels as smoke poured from the bobbing aircraft.

It appeared the helicopter had engine trouble before it went down, passengers said. The pilot deployed yellow emergency floats and made a controlled landing, authorities said.

The propellers were askew, but the aircraft, which was owned by Liberty Helicopters, did not appear badly damaged, according to Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Holly Baker.

Among the passengers to emerge unscathed was 21-year-old Jose Mejia, a New York Fire Department emergency medical technician who helped his girlfriend and others exit the aircraft. All eight people donned life jackets and were in the water for less than five minutes before rescuers arrived, said Fire Department spokesman Craig Mosia.

Mejia said he was terrified when he realized something was wrong with the helicopter.

"I thought I was going to die; that was definitely my initial reaction," Mejia said. "When I heard the engine and I heard the propellers, my girlfriend looked back at me and I just saw her screaming, and I thought I was going to die."

As the eight were pulled to safety, a passenger ferry crammed with onlookers hovered nearby.

"It was really scary because I don't know how to swim and I just jumped into the water without having my life vest inflated," Machado said.

Mejia said the tour was a gift from Machado for their four-year anniversary. "She did this as a surprise. Well, surprise," he joked.

The rescuers passed the eight to Coast Guard officials, who returned them to shore for medical evaluation, Mosia said. There were no serious injuries, the Coast Guard said.

The FAA planned to investigate, Baker said. The aircraft was not badly damaged.

Liberty Helicopters, which runs sightseeing excursions around the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island and Manhattan, said it had no comment. For most tours, Liberty passengers pay between $30 and $186 per person for rides lasting two to 17 minutes. Officials said the craft had not been privately contracted.

The helicopter, a Eurocopter EC-135, took off from a heliport on Manhattan's West Side shortly before 5 p.m., Baker said.

By evening, the helicopter - still afloat on its pontoons - was secured to a New Jersey pier, the Coast Guard said.

Meanwhile, in Virginia, a 43-year-old man and his 11-year-old son were rescued from a sinking seaplane Saturday after it flipped while landing on the James River, authorities said.

It appeared that one of the plane's pontoons clipped a wave while coming in, police said.

© 2007 The Associated Press