WAS THE ALL-POWERFUL CHRISTIAN GOD BUSY TAKING A DUMP WHILE THIS WAS GOING
ON? WHY CAN'T HE GET OFF OF HIS FAT, LAZY ***** ?
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/07/27/helicopter.crash/index.html
CNN) -- A police chase through the streets of downtown Phoenix turned into a
midair tragedy Friday afternoon when two television news helicopters
covering the action collided and crashed to the ground in smoke and flame,
killing all four people on board.
Two news helicopters plummet to earth after colliding in midair over a park
in Phoenix, Arizona.
KTVK-TV said photojournalist Jim Cox and pilot Scott Bowerback were killed.
KNXV-TV identified its crew as photographer Rick Krolak and pilot Craig
Smith.
The helicopters collided as the stations were covering the police pursuit of
a stolen white truck towing a trailer. Assistant Chief Mark Angle of the
Phoenix Fire Department said wreckage from both helicopters then landed in a
downtown park.
Aerial footage from another station covering the chase, KPNX-TV, showed
large plumes of black smoke and flames coming from the wreckage."I was
driving and heard a bang," one unnamed witness told KPHO.
"I was standing out on Central Avenue and I was looking over to the park and
saw the helicopters get close," Jerry Fender told KPHO. "The blue one split
and went down. The red or orange one went right after it."
"Looked something like 9/11 with debris exploding everywhere," said witness
Brian Kenneth, the station reported.
Rick Gotchie, a Phoenix air-conditioning contractor working at a nearby
building, was watching the helicopters circling the scene and noticed they
were getting closer to each other, The Associated Press reported.
"I kept saying go lower, go lower, but he didn't," Gotchie said.
Angle said the "silver lining" in the accident was that the choppers did not
hit any structures on the ground. The site of the crash was near a Veterans
Affairs hospital and several high-rise buildings, he said.
"We do not believe at this time that anyone on the ground was struck," Angle
said.
The National Transportation Safety Board announced it will send a team to
Phoenix to investigate the crash.
Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor told The Associated
Press that the agency is reviewing air traffic control tapes to see if the
helicopters' pilots were communicating before the crash.
"Typically air traffic controllers clear helicopters into an area where they
can cover a chase like this," Gregor told AP. "Once they are in the area,
the pilots themselves are responsible for keeping themselves separated from
other aircraft."
Phoenix Police Chief Jack Harris said the chase began when police received a
report of a stolen vehicle and began pursuing a suspect, who eventually
abandoned that vehicle and stole the white truck that was being chased at
the time of the chopper collision.
The suspect later bailed out of that vehicle and barricaded himself in a
house, where he was captured by SWAT officers who stormed the residence,
police said.
Phoenix police Sgt. Joel Tranter said the man was treated at a hospital for
several dog bites before being booked into jail.
The police chief said the suspect will likely face criminal charges for the
deaths in the helicopter crash
"I think he will be held responsible for any of the deaths from this
tragedy," Harris said.
The park would remain closed indefinitely while investigators worked,
Tranter said
.
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