logo
Student killed in freak helicopter horror as pal snapped pictures of tragedy

Student killed in freak helicopter horror as pal snapped pictures of tragedy

Daily Mirror07-08-2025
Isiah Otieno, who was the son of a Kenyan minister, was 23 and a student when he was instantly killed in the horror accident in Canada. His dad found out about his death via email
In a horrifying incident, a politician's son was killed instantly when a helicopter plummeted from the sky and struck him as he walked down the street.

Isiah Otieno, the 23-year-old son of a Kenyan minister, was tragically killed in the freak accident.

His father, Dalmas Otieno, the former Kenyan Public Service Minister, heartbreakingly discovered the news of his son's death in an email.

Back in 2008, Isiah was studying at the College of the Rockies in Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada. On May 13, he set out to post a letter to his family in Nairobi.
As he crossed the street, a Bell 206 helicopter conducting power line inspections suddenly fell from the sky, crashed into him, and erupted into flames, reports Nairobi Leo. Eyewitnesses recounted how the aircraft seemed to struggle mid-air before spiralling into a fiery wreckage on a quiet residential street, reports the Express.
Tragically, several bystanders reportedly tried to warn Isiah, shouting for him to move. However, he was wearing earphones and may not have heard the helicopter's noise or the frantic calls from those nearby.

The crash also claimed the lives of pilot Edward Heeb, 57, and BC Hydro employees Dirk Rozenboom, 45, and Robert Lehmann, 37.
Earlier this year another Bell helicopter crashed near Pier 40 in New York City, killing six people.
Chillingly, one of the eyewitnesses who captured the unfolding tragedy was Isiah's best friend, who was taking photos of the tragedy as it happened.

One onlooker, Elmer Bautz, said: "There was a pedestrian walking on the street across from me and he was just about at the back alley and I don't think he even knew what hit him."
Another witness said: "It didn't crash at a high speed. The pilot had been trying to control it, but the motor was out at that point and he fell the last 15 feet. Unfortunately, it hit a pedestrian on the sidewalk."

In a tragic turn of events, Isiah's heartbroken father, Dalmas Otieno, received the dreadful news via email. Isaiah's friends used his own email account to break the news to his dad, with the grim details later confirmed by Canadian officials.
Dalmas had just spoken to his son over the phone barely an hour before the fatal incident.
The College of the Rockies paid tribute to Isaiah with a memorial service. Nick Rubidge, who was the President and CEO at the time, remembered him as a kind-hearted, cheerful, and gentle lad, who proudly represented his homeland.

"He had a wonderful, gentle nature and was an excellent ambassador for his nation," Rubidge remarked.
Subsequent investigations disclosed the helicopter had encountered a catastrophic engine failure. In a valiant last act, the pilot steered towards the street to avoid hitting any houses, tragically striking Isiah in the process.
In the aftermath of the inquest, a jury put forward eight recommendations to Transport Canada and the Transportation Safety Board. These encompassed more explicit regulations for helicopter operators, a mandate for dual-engine aircraft when flying over urban areas, and compulsory data trackers on all commercial helicopters.

Following the tragic loss of his son, Dalmas Otieno travelled to Cranbrook, accompanied by his wife and the Kenyan High Commissioner to Canada, demanding compensation for the tragedy. The former Kenyan Public Service Minister expressed that while no sum could replace his son, he hopes for a swift conclusion to the investigation.
The engine from the ill-fated helicopter was meticulously disassembled and examined by the Transportation Safety Board. Senior investigator Damien Lawson acknowledged that pinpointing the cause of the accident would be a formidable task.
TSB spokesperson Bill Yearwood stated that investigators were fortunate that despite the blaze that consumed the helicopter post-crash, the engine remained largely intact. Given the absence of a flight data recorder on the helicopter, any information derived from the engine was vital and confirmed engine failure had caused the crash.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bounty of $5m placed on warlord ‘Barbecue' who rules world's most dangerous city with super-gang who burn people alive
Bounty of $5m placed on warlord ‘Barbecue' who rules world's most dangerous city with super-gang who burn people alive

Scottish Sun

time3 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

Bounty of $5m placed on warlord ‘Barbecue' who rules world's most dangerous city with super-gang who burn people alive

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A MULTI-million dollar bounty has been placed on the head of a warlord who rules over one of the world's most dangerous cities. American prosecutors are offering $5 million for information leading to the arrest of a Haitian gang leader Jimmy Cherizier - better known as "Barbecue". Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 7 Former police officer Jimmy 'Barbecue' Cherizier Credit: Reuters 7 Armed gang members question locals in Haiti's capital of Port-au-Prince 7 Violence in Port-au-Prince has reached unprecedented levels and hundreds of thousands of civilians have been caught in the crossfires 7 The entire capital has been burning amid the civil crisis 7 Thousands of civilians are believed to have been caught in the brutal crossfire Credit: AP The vicious warlord has overseen bloody chaos in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince, which now often resembles a battlefield. Thousands of civilians are believed to have been caught in the brutal crossfire. There have even been reports of rotting bodies littering the streets of the city as lawlessness runs amok. Cherizier, a former Haitian cop, now leads a gang alliance called Viv Ansanm. read more in world news PEACE PLOT Trump & Putin 'plan West Bank-style occupation of Ukraine' to secure truce This group stands accused of numerous atrocities including murders and kidnappings across the lawless capital. The US if offering a $5 million (£3.7 million) reward for information that leads to Cherizier's arrest. "There's a good reason that there's a $5 million reward for information leading to Cherizier's arrest," US Attorney Jeanine Pirro said. "He's a gang leader responsible for heinous human rights abuses, including violence against American citizens in Haiti." The indictment alleges that he and US citizen Bazile Richardson solicited funds from the Haitian diaspora in the United States. This money was then allegedly used to pay gang members and buy weapons in defiance of US sanctions. Irish woman among nine people kidnapped in horror planned armed gang attack on orphanage in Haiti Richardson was arrested in Texas last month. The pair helped "bankroll Cherizier's violent criminal enterprise, which is driving a security crisis in Haiti", according to Assistant US Attorney General John Eisenberg. He further said US authorities would "continue to pursue those who enable Haiti's violence and instability". Cherizier's nickname Barbecue is rumoured refer to him setting his victims on fire. Under rampant gang brutality, Port-au-Prince is now considered one of the most dangerous cities on the planet. Fighting between gangs, cops and citizen groups has ripped through the city, leaving its infrastructure in tatters. Health services are crumbling and food insecurity has grown increasingly acute throughout Port-au-Prince. A recent attempt by a UN backed Kenyan led security force failed to restore control from the gangs. Haiti was thrown into crisis when President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated by unidentified gunmen in 2021. Who is Barbecue? HAITI'S Port-au-Prince currently lies in the hands of the feared Jimmy "Barbecue Barbecue - who is rumoured to have earned his nickname for setting his victims on fire - envisions himself as a "revolutionary", a self-professed "man of the people". His methods involve the killing, maiming and extorting of anyone unlucky enough to fall within his turf - turning every day into a constant battle for survival for residents. The fired cop turned warlord has been taking to the streets with a renewed vengeance and a plan to overthrow the government. He is currently sanctioned by the UK and its allies for "engaging in acts threatening the peace, security and stability of Haiti". And his influence is fast increasing as the country spirals into further turmoil sparked by the 2021 assassination of the country's Prime Minister Jovenal Moïse. Ever since, a security vacuum opened up and Barbecue has been greedily exploiting it, taking over territory and expanding his coalition with other gangs to wage further war. G9 has also been responsible for repeatedly cutting Haiti off from its much-needed fuel supply by taking its main oil terminal hostage. In a savage display of strength, Barbecue paralysed the country several times by preventing the distribution of food, water and vital medicines, plunging it into a deeper humanitarian crisis. Barbecue's criminal career dates back to his time as a police officer, InSight Crime reports. He participated in an anti-gang operation in 2017, leading to the extrajudicial killing of nine civilians. In 2018, he led a group of seven gangs in a massacre in La Saline, Haiti's worst massacre in over a decade. Barbecue was then fired from the police force and a warrant was issued for his arrest. In 2019, he participated in a four-day attack across Port-au-Prince's Bel-Air neighborhood, killing at least 24 people. 7 A man searches through burning trash in Port-au-Prince

The case for Letby's innocence looks weaker than ever
The case for Letby's innocence looks weaker than ever

Spectator

time3 days ago

  • Spectator

The case for Letby's innocence looks weaker than ever

The annual Panorama documentary on Lucy Letby appeared on BBC 1 this week, barely a week after a more one-sided pro-Letby documentary was shown on ITV. Channel 4 has a Letby show in the works and Channel 5 has already broadcast two. Fortunately, there is plenty of material for producers to get their teeth into. Not only did her trial last ten months but there was a retrial after that, plus two appeal attempts, and her supporters have been making new claims on any almost weekly basis ever since. The ITV documentary was Letbyism 1.0, mostly consisting of talking points about shift patterns, Post-it notes, door-swipe data etc. that have either been debunked or which are now understood to be irrelevant. The Panorama documentary – the third in what is sure to be an ongoing series – focused on the second phase of Letbyism that began with two press conferences, the second organised by Letby's PR firm (yes, she has a PR firm working for her), in December 2024 and February 2025. In the first press conference we were told that the insulin tests used to convict her of poisoning Baby F and Baby L were wrong, and that Baby O was accidentally killed by a doctor. In the second press conference we were told that no murders had taken place, that the insulin readings for Babies F and L were perfectly normal, and that Baby O died from a liver injury sustained during childbirth. Confused? So are they. Letby has a number of distinguished medics in her corner but they seem to be finding it difficult to put forward a consistent narrative. A panel of experts convened by the Canadian neonatologist and economist Dr Shoo Lee has offered innocent explanations for all of the 22 collapses and deaths on Letby's indictment (including the ones for which she was not convicted, which seems over-eager). Thanks to the unexpected appearance of credible physicians on Team Letby, her supporters have been playing a game of 'my expert is bigger than your expert' ever since, but the Court of Appeal is not interested in how 'eminent' or 'world leading' a witness is. It only wants to know if they have a point, and it is far from obvious that the 'international panel', which contains no pathologists, radiologists, endocrinologists or haematologists, have cracked the case by looking at some medical records a decade after the events took place. Dr Michael Hall, a neonatologist who was ready to give evidence for the defence in Letby's first trial but was never called, gave short shrift to the panel's theory that Baby A died from thrombosis. He pointed out that this suggestion had been raised in court and said 'I'm not sure that the expert witnesses have added anything to that conversation.' Nor was there any evidence that Baby A's mother had passed a rare blood-clotting disorder onto the child. On the contrary, blood tests had disproved this. Hall was also dismissive of the idea that Baby O suffered a liver injury during childbirth. Baby O's mother had plenty of complaints to air about the Countess of Chester Hospital at the Thirlwall Inquiry, but the standard of her planned Caesarean section was not one of them. In any case, Baby O's haemoglobin readings strongly suggested that he had not suffered a liver injury at birth and even Letby admitted that whatever happened to his liver had happened 'on my watch' the following day. Speaking anonymously – presumably to avoid the wrath of Letby's increasingly militant fanbase – a pathologist told Panorama that the theory about Baby O being killed by a doctor's misplaced needle was poppycock. Indeed, everyone on the show seemed to agree that this never happened, despite Dr Richard Taylor stating it as fact on live television eight months ago. With regards to the insulin poisonings, Shoo Lee relied on the expertise of the mechanical engineer Dr Geoff Chase and the chemical engineer Dr Helen Shannon, possibly because he couldn't get any paediatric endocrinologists to come out to bat for Britain's most prolific child-murderer. In their report, they claimed that the incredibly high insulin readings and extremely low C-peptide readings for Baby F and Baby L were 'within the expected range for preterm infants'. Professor John Gregory, a paediatric endocrinologist, told Panorama that such readings were 'exceedingly unlikely' to be natural; in other words, the babies were almost certainly given exogenous insulin. Interviewed by Panorama, Dr Chase said that 'within the expected range' was a poor choice of words, but insisted that such results were 'not uncommon'. He then downgraded this to 'unusual' and 'possible'. The only British member of Lee's panel is Professor Neena Modi. Asked about the claim that Baby O had suffered a liver injury during childbirth, her response was essentially that although there wasn't any evidence that such an injury had been sustained in this instance, a traumatic childbirth is the kind of thing that could cause a liver injury. It was at this moment that the penny dropped: from the outside, Lee's panel do not seem to have been looking for the theory with the most evidence to support it, nor even for the most likely explanation. They appear to have been looking for anything that sounds vaguely plausible so long as it doesn't involve Lucy Letby inflicting deliberate harm on defenceless infants. Dr Hall, who seems genuinely unsure whether Letby is guilty or innocent, said that he feared that the tenuous opinions of the international panel could 'rebound' on her. As this Panorama showed, many of them can be batted away with ease since they were either raised and rejected in court or have no evidence to support them. Letby can go to the Criminal Cases Review Commission as many times as she likes, and is likely to have plenty of time to do so, but every application takes years and the Court of Appeal does not appreciate having its time wasted with lengthy submissions of little merit. The eminence of the experts and the hard work of the PR company do not come into it. Meanwhile, the public may see distinguished doctors disagreeing and conclude that there must be reasonable doubt by definition, but that is not how it works. Only one side can be right and the medical evidence, though important, was only one part of the case. Hundreds of pieces of evidence could be cited, almost all of it circumstantial but almost all of it pointing an accusing finger at staff nurse Letby. It will take many more documentaries for it all to be broadcast to the viewing public, but at the current rate we should get there by the end of the decade.

Trump places $5m bounty on brutal warlord ‘Barbecue' who burned 70 people to death
Trump places $5m bounty on brutal warlord ‘Barbecue' who burned 70 people to death

Daily Mirror

time3 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Trump places $5m bounty on brutal warlord ‘Barbecue' who burned 70 people to death

Jimmy 'Barbecue' Cherizier has been indicted on charges of conspiring to transfer funds from the United States to fund gang activities in Haiti and now has a $5 million bounty on his head Donald Trump has placed a $5 million price on the head of Haitian warlord Jimmy 'Barbecue' Cherizier. ‌ The US Justice Department has accused the gang boss of funnelling cash from the US to bankroll his bloody criminal empire in Port-au-Prince. Officials announced the bounty - worth £3.7 million - offering the reward for information that leads to the capture of the 48-year-old former police officer. ‌ He is wanted in America for allegedly violating US sanctions. Cherizier, along with alleged accomplice Bazile Richardson, has been indicted on charges of conspiring to transfer funds from the US to support gang activities in Haiti. ‌ Richardson, a naturalised US citizen, was arrested in Texas last month. 'There's a good reason that there's a $5 million reward for information leading to Cherizier's arrest,' US Attorney Jeanine Pirro said. 'He's a gang leader responsible for heinous human rights abuses, including violence against American citizens in Haiti.' Cherizier, who leads the G9 Family and Allies alliance of heavily armed gangs, is accused of running a reign of terror across the Haitian capital. ‌ His street name is said to stem from his alleged penchant for setting fire to rivals' homes while the occupants are still inside. He maintains it comes from his mother's grilled chicken stand. In one of the most notorious incidents linked to his rule, 70 people were killed in 2018 when he allegedly torched 400 houses in La Saline, a densely populated neighbourhood in Port-au-Prince. The US Treasury Department placed him under sanctions in 2020, with the United Nations following suit in 2022. ‌ The gangs under his command are accused of murder, robbery, extortion, rape, targeted assassinations, drug trafficking, and kidnappings. According to US prosecutors, Cherizier and Richardson raised funds from Haitians living in America, funnelling the money through intermediaries in Haiti to pay gang members' wages and buy firearms. ‌ The G9 alliance played a key role in an organised assault last year that ultimately forced Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry from office, prompting the creation of a transitional council to take his place. 'Cherizier and (Richardson) sought to raise funds in the United States to bankroll Cherizier's violent criminal enterprise, which is driving a security crisis in Haiti,' said Assistant Attorney General John Eisenberg. 'The National Security Division does not tolerate criminal gang fundraising in the United States, and will continue to pursue those who enable Haiti's violence and instability.' Haiti remains the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. The United Nations estimates that at least 3,141 people were killed in the first half of this year alone, despite the arrival of a Kenyan-led multinational security force to support the country's police. Much of the capital remains under the control of armed gangs, leaving ordinary Haitians trapped in a cycle of violence, fear, and lawlessness.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store