Officials try to ID remains from helicopter crash
Delicate operation to recover firefighters' bodies moving slowly
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Firefighting remains a deadly job Aug. 10: Eight firefighters and a pilot were killed Tuesday when their helicopter crashed while fighting a wildfire in California. As NBC’s Chris Jansing reports, this latest accident is focusing new attention on the growing threat of wildfires, not just to property, but to firefighters themselves. Nightly News |
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WEAVERVILLE, Calif. - Authorities worked Sunday to identify badly burned remains collected from the site of a helicopter crash in the Northern California wilderness as crews continued the painstaking effort to recover bodies from the wreckage.
A day earlier, helicopters carrying flag-draped stretchers that bore some of the remains were greeted by an honor guard of firefighters at a forest base camp.
Accompanied by a fire engine escort, the stretchers were taken to the Trinity County coroner's office in Weaverville. Authorities there would probably have to rely on DNA analysis and dental records to identify the bodies, U.S. Forest Service spokesman Tom Kroll said.
Nine people were killed in the crash.
Rugged crash site
The recovery of the remains was initially expected to be completed Sunday, but the delicate operation at the rugged crash site was moving slowly, officials said.
"It's taking quite a bit of work to extract them," said Forest Service spokeswoman Cynthia Sage.
The helicopter was ferrying 10 firefighters, two pilots and a U.S. Forest Service employee back to base camp Tuesday after crews battled a fire about 215 miles northwest of Sacramento.
The Sikorsky S-61N helicopter had just been refueled when it lifted off from a remote clearing, struck a tree and plummeted into a hillside, according to National Transportation Safety Board officials. The chopper then erupted into flames.
Two of the four men who survived the crash, firefighters Michael Brown, 20, and Jonathan Frohreich, 18, both of Medford, Ore., were discharged from the University of California Davis Medical Center in Sacramento on Saturday. They suffered facial burns and broken bones.
Mourning the loss
Brown said Saturday that he couldn't remember anything about the crash but felt that he was spared because "God had his hand wrapped around me."
He said he was mourning the loss of friends: "Those guys were brothers to me."
Pilot William Coultas of Oregon has undergone skin grafting for severe burns. He was in critical condition Sunday, said Martha Alcott, a spokeswoman for UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento.
A cockpit voice-data recorder recovered from the wreckage Thursday was made by a British company and was being sent to Britain for analysis, NTSB officials said.
The 34-square-mile blaze the firefighters had been battling before their helicopter crashed was 20 percent contained Sunday, fire officials said.
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