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Steve76
14th Nov 2004, 09:16
Man... I am only half an hour down the road.
I could've done with finding a leftover machine. :*

PENTICTON -- Two helicopters abandoned on the Penticton Indian reserve Thursday, less than a quarter of a mile apart, have triggered an investigation by the RCMP, Canada Customs and Transport Canada. "Yesterday, I believe in the afternoon, there was two of our band members cutting wood on the north portion of the reserve land base," said Penticton Indian band Chief Stewart Phillip on Friday

A helicopter landed near the men, and the sole occupant jumped out with a duffel bag. When he got closer to the men, the pilot apparently said, "You're not my ride," and ran away

The men reported the incident to the tribal police, who called the RCMP

"The site was secured by the tribal police service, and this morning word was put out to the relevant agencies," Phillip said

The tribal police were to wait by the helicopter until a Kelowna team was flown in by helicopter

"They were a bit upset because the tribal police were not waiting by the helicopter as agreed, but it turns out they were waiting by a second helicopter, a short distance from the first." The helicopters were less than a quarter of a mile from each other, said Phillip, but both were hidden from view by small trees. One of the helicopter's rotors, likely from the tail of the aircraft, was broken from striking a tree

Though the pilots' identities are unknown, one of the helicopters has been traced to Vernon, and the other to New Westminster

"I don't think there is any doubt this is drug related," said Phillip. "Why else would they be up there? They landed in a very concealed location." He also pointed to a high level of interest by the various agencies -Canada Customs and Transport Canada -- and the value of the helicopters as indicators of the seriousness of the situation, suggesting a link to organized crime

The aircraft are worth an estimated $1 million, and the band is working on a seizure notice under trespassing law

Phillip wonders if band members are involved, since the men who were approached were natives

He said he thought long and hard about bringing the story forward to the media. "When you live in the middle of a situation like this and more details are coming forward each day, it becomes pretty intense," he said

He decided the public needed to be informed

"I just think we have to expose this and let all levels of government, the RCMP and the public know it's a very serious problem that we are dealing with," said Phillip, who is committed to cleaning up his community.

rollie rotors
14th Nov 2004, 16:04
Pentiction Indian reserve.......aren't they the same folks who claimed the absolute rights to the Okanagan's mythical "Ogo Pogo" a few years ago. Guess the royalty stream vanished and a new venture was in order.

B Sousa
14th Nov 2004, 17:52
"Seizure Notice under Tresspassing Law"
I thought we won that war years ago..... You take my Helicopter after Im out of Ammunition.

Cyclic Hotline
14th Nov 2004, 19:45
Seized helicopters may have smuggled drugs: chief

Last Updated Sun, 14 Nov 2004 15:18:30 EST

PENTICTON, B.C. - Two helicopters seized Thursday by police on a B.C. native reserve may have been used for drug smuggling, the reserve's chief says.

Tribal police on the Penticton Indian Reserve captured the aircraft after they landed in a remote area near Summerland on Thursday.

Chief Stewart Phillip said he thinks the two machines are linked to drug trafficking, adding that organized crime has been moving onto the reserve for several years.

Suspicions were raised when the helicopters landed near two members of the band who were cutting firewood. A man carrying a large duffle bag got out of one helicopter and asked the men if they were his "ride," the chief says.

Then the man appeared to realize he was talking to the wrong people, and ran through the forest to a waiting truck.

The woodcutters called the tribal police.

The RCMP, Canada Customs and Transport Canada are jointly investigating the case.

CBC Radio has learned that one machine was once owned by Coastland Helicopters in Richmond and the other by Alpine Helicopters in Kelowna.

Both companies said the helicopters were sold last summer, but didn't identify the buyer, citing the continuing investigation.

Neither helicopter was registered with Transport Canada and neither was insured.