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Time Out
26th Sep 2004, 13:22
Missing tour helicopter found

By Jan TenBruggencate
Advertiser Kaua'i Bureau

LIHU'E, Kaua'i—A U.S. Coast Guard search helicopter's crew this afternoon spotted the burned wreckage of a tour helicopter after a two-day search that involved at least a dozen aircraft.

A Bali Hai Bell 206 chopper with five people aboard smashed into a cloud-shrouded near-vertical cliff and burned Friday afternoon, with no apparent survivors.

Clouds and rain obscured the crash site, which was not discovered until 2 p.m. today. A Kaua'i Fire Department rescue team hovered near the site all afternoon before getting a brief opening in the weather and concluding that it was unlikely anyone survived.

"It appeared it basically ran right into the mountain and burned. It was burned beyond recognition," said fire rescue specialist Ehren Edwards, of Kalaheo.

A second fire department crew went up in the late afternoon aboard an Inter-Island Helicopters Hughes 500 helicopter to assess the site and determine how best to approach the recovery of the bodies. Fire department incident commander Mitchell Ikeda said a rescue crew would return to the site this morning to attempt the recovery.

The identities of the pilot and passengers were not released. County information officer Cyndi Ozaki said the passengers included a couple from Germany and a 36-year-old Mainland man and a 30-year-old Mainland woman. Bali Hai helicopters officials said the firm had no comment about the crash.

The tour helicopter left the Port Allen airfield a little after 4 p.m. Friday, and was last seen about 5 p.m. flying by the Koke'e State Park, which would have been about halfway through a normal tour. There were no further sightings and no radio transmissions from the aircraft.

The Federal Aviation Administration called the Coast Guard about 6:05 p.m. to report an overdue helicopter. The Coast Guard and local helicopter firms launched a late afternoon search effort, but found nothing. The missing aircraft was not equipped with an emergency radio beacon, which many aircraft are required to carry.

"They were operating under a waiver from the FAA" that allowed the Bali Hai helicopter to fly without a transponder, said Lt. Danny Shaw, Coast Guard senior rescue coordinator.

"It might have been a lot easier if it had had an ELT (emergency locator transmitter) on board," Shaw said.

Close to a dozen helicopters took to the air over Kaua'i at dawn today, including two Coast Guard choppers, a Navy helicopter, the Hughes 500 leased by the county fire department, and several volunteer helicopters from local tour firms. The search was overseen by a Coast Guard C-130 Hercules, which flew overhead and provided communications, command and control.

"As early as 6 a.m., we had 11 helicopters up in the air, searching," said a Kaua'i Fire Department spokesman.

The Bell JetRanger helicopter is a five-seat aircraft, capable of carrying a pilot and four passengers. Bali Hai normally runs 45-minute and 55-minute tours clockwise around the central mountains of Kaua'i, flying across Gay & Robinson cane fields, the Waimea Canyon, Koke'e State Park, Kalalau Valley and along the Na Pali cliffs before turning at the North Shore coastline with stops at the Wai'ale'ale crater and Manawaipuna Fall waterfall.

Based on that flight plan, the aircraft appears to have been nearing the end of its tour, flying between Wai'ale'ale and the waterfall when it crashed. The flight map on Bali Hai's Web site shows the path crossing a ridge between Mt. Kahili and Wai'ale'ale near the crash site.

Rescue specialist Edwards said the helicopter appeared to have hit the cliffside about 200 feet below the top of the ridge, at an elevation of about 3,500 feet.

A National Transportation Safety Board crash investigator was expected on the island yesterday to attempt to determine the cause of the crash. source (http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2004/Sep/25/br/br01p.html)

B Sousa
26th Sep 2004, 14:45
I have lost a lot of friends "just below the top of the ridge". Seems to be a place where the clouds like to meet the ground. Another sad day for Hawaii operators and a black mark on the industry.

Heliport
26th Sep 2004, 21:38
Associated Press report Helicopter Crashes in Hawaii; 5 Missing

KAUAI - The burned wreckage of a missing tour helicopter was spotted Saturday in a remote mountainous area of Kauai, but rescuers were unable to reach the area before dark to learn if the pilot and his four passengers survived.

The helicopter, reported missing on Friday, apparently crashed into a ridge and burst into flames, said Kauai Fire Department rescue specialist Ehren Edwards, who saw the crash site from the air.

Still missing were the pilot, a 36-year-old man, a 30-year-old woman, and a German couple on board, officials said. Rescuers planned to resume the search Sunday.

The pilot, who formerly flew with India's air force, has flown tours for the past two months, Coast Guard Lt. Danny Shaw said.

The craft belonging to Bali Hai Helicopter Tours was reported missing after it failed to return from a one-hour tour. Darkness forced the Coast Guard to suspend an initial search Friday night.

No emergency locator transmitter was required aboard the craft, said Jennifer Johnson, a Coast Guard spokeswoman.

A man who answered the telephone at Bali Hai declined comment.

In July 2003, five people were killed when a tour helicopter operated by a different company crashed in central Kauai.

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Time Out
27th Sep 2004, 22:34
PORT ALLEN, Hawaii Sept. 27, 2004 — Wind up to 60 mph prevented helicopters from lowering rescue workers to the wreckage of a tour helicopter that crashed in a remote mountainous area of Kauai.

County officials said the military was asked for a more powerful helicopter so that another attempt could be made Monday to reach the Bell 206B helicopter that crashed Friday with five people on board.

"This wreckage is located at about 2,700 feet on about a 60-degree slope," fire department battalion chief Bob Kaden said Sunday. "So we want to be safe."

Officials said they did not know whether there were survivors, but said the aircraft burst into flames after crashing into a ridge. On board were the pilot, a 36-year-old man, a 30-year-old woman and a German couple, officials said. Their names have not been released.

The helicopter, which belonged to Bali Hai Helicopter Tours, was reported missing Friday after failing to return from a tour on time, officials said. A crew on a Coast Guard helicopter spotted the crash site Saturday.

The pilot formerly flew with India's air force and had flown tours for two months, said Coast Guard Lt. Danny Shaw. The helicopter was about 26 years old, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.

In July 2003, five people were killed when a tour helicopter operated by a different company crashed in central Kauai. source (http://abcnews.go.com/wire/US/ap20040927_463.html)

Edited to add this link (http://www.kauaiworld.com/articles/2004/09/27/news/news01.txt) with some further news.

Time Out
28th Sep 2004, 14:32
LIHUE, Hawaii The bodies of four people killed in a helicopter crash have been found in a remote mountainous region of of Hawaii.

Rescue workers in Kauai trekked to the wreckage.

The body of a fifth is still missing.

The tour helicopter crashed on a mountaintop and burst into flames. It then slid down a steep cliff face. An Army Black Hawk assisted in the recovery.

The helicopter was reported missing Friday. source (http://www.whnt19.com/Global/story.asp?S=2356526)