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3 medical crew die in helicopter crash

Aircraft had just dropped off patient at hospital in Reno, Nev.

Image: Part of crashed helicopter
An investigator checks the boom of the Mountain Lifeflight helicopter that crashed Saturday near Reno, Calif.
Marilyn Newton / The Reno Gazette-Journal via AP
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updated 6:46 p.m. ET Nov. 14, 2009

RENO, Nev. - Investigators said the pilot of a medical helicopter issued a mayday moments before the aircraft crashed into a hilly area north of Reno near the Nevada-California state line early Saturday.

All three crew members — the pilot, flight nurse and paramedic — died. Their identities were not immediately released.

The helicopter, an Aerospatiale AS350, had dropped off a patient at a Reno hospital and was returning to its base in Susanville, Calif., when it crashed around 2 a.m. Saturday, according to Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor.

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A witness driving on a nearby road told authorities he saw nothing unusual about the helicopter’s flight before it fell rapidly from the sky. The witness said he saw a fireball when the helicopter hit the ground, according to Gregor.

Gregor said the pilot was not communicating with air traffic controllers at the time of the accident. Investigators from the FAA and National Transportation Safety Board spent Saturday combing the wreckage about 29 miles northwest of Reno in Lassen County as they searched for clues about the cause of the crash.

The wreckage will be taken to a salvage yard Sunday.

The helicopter was operated by Mountain Lifeflight out of Susanville. The company issued a brief statement confirming the loss of all three crew members aboard the helicopter.

It was the second fatal crash of a Mountain Lifeflight helicopter returning to Susanville after dropping off a patient at Renown Medical Center in Reno.

According to the National Transportation Safety Board, a Eurocopter AS-350B operated by the company crashed into Honey Lake, about 11 miles southeast of the company’s Susanville base, on March 21, 2002. NTSB investigators determined the pilot failed to maintain altitude and said the smooth surface of the water contributed to pilot disorientation.

The pilot died in the crash and two crew members were seriously injured.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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