logo
Divers search Hudson River for parts of helicopter after crash

Divers search Hudson River for parts of helicopter after crash

Yahoo12-04-2025

Divers used sonar on Friday to search for key pieces of a sightseeing helicopter which broke apart in midair and plunged into the Hudson River between Manhattan and New Jersey.
All six people aboard were killed — a family of five from Spain and the pilot, a 36-year-old US Navy veteran.
The main and rear rotors, main transmission, roof structure and tail structure were still missing a day after Thursday's crash, National Transportation Safety Board chairwoman Jennifer Homendy said.
Witnesses said they saw the main rotor detach and spin away, and bystander video showed parts of the aircraft tumbling through the air.
Ms Homendy said investigators had only just begun looking at the wreckage, flight logs and other material and would not speculate on the cause. The agency, which has been spared from the Trump administration's job-cutting measures, deployed 17 people to the crash scene, including 10 investigators.
'Everything is on the table. We don't rule anything out,' she said. 'We take a very detailed and comprehensive view, and it's way too early in the investigation.'
The helicopter crashed around 3.15pm on Thursday, about 15 minutes after departing from a lower Manhattan heliport.
It flew up the west side of Manhattan, turned around near the George Washington Bridge and was heading south when it plummeted upside down into a shallow stretch of the river near Jersey City, New Jersey.
Just before takeoff, Agustin Escobar, his wife Merce Camprubi Montal and their three children — Victor, four, Mercedes, eight, and Agustin, 10 — smiled in front of the helicopter in souvenir photos posted to the tour operator's website.
Mr Escobar, a 49-year-old executive with the German conglomerate Siemens, had extended a business trip to the US to sightsee in New York City and celebrate Mercedes's ninth birthday, which would have been Friday, and his wife's upcoming 40th birthday.
She was an executive at Siemens Energy, a company that had been a part of the conglomerate before being spun off as a separate entity.
In a statement posted on the social platform X on Friday night by Mr Montal's brother, Joan Camprubi Montal, family members expressed gratitude for the 'massive expressions of condolences and support,' adding: 'There are no words to describe what we are experiencing, nor to thank the warmth received.'
Writing in Spanish and Catalan, he said family members had travelled to New York to handle arrangements and asked people to respect their privacy.
'These are very difficult times, but optimism and joy have always characterised our family. We want to keep the memory of a happy and united family, in the sweetest moment of their lives,' he said. 'They have departed together, leaving an indelible mark among all their relatives, friends, and acquaintances.'
The pilot, Seankese Johnson, received his commercial pilot's license in 2023, according to the Federal Aviation Administration and had logged about 800 hours of flight time as of March, Mr Homendy said.
Recently, he posted a photo on Facebook of himself piloting a helicopter with Manhattan in the background. In 2023, he posted that he was flying a firefighting helicopter.
'Long hours and painstaking work to get to this moment. Thank you for all the love and support from those who've helped me get here,' he wrote.
He enlisted in the US Navy in 2006 and served until 2018, Defence Department records show.
The helicopter, a Bell 206 LongRanger IV, was built in 2004. According to FAA records, it had a maintenance issue last September involving its transmission assembly.
An entry in the agency's Service Difficulty Reporting System shows the transmission assembly had metal in oil, a sign of wear and a bearing in the transmission was found to be flaking.
The helicopter had logged 12,728 total flight hours at the time, according to the records.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BREAKING: Federal immigration raids hitting Omaha
BREAKING: Federal immigration raids hitting Omaha

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

BREAKING: Federal immigration raids hitting Omaha

Customers are perplexed to find a South Omaha store along the main South 24th Street business district closed at mid-morning Tuesday. (Cindy Gonzalez/Nebraska Examiner) OMAHA — Multiple immigration enforcement operations unfolding throughout Omaha on Tuesday have all local elected Latino leaders out visiting various work sites, some South Omaha businesses shutting their doors for the time being and area residents checking in with each other in a frenzy. Latino leaders tracking the situation, posting about it on social media and speaking with workers said they had heard of up to a half-dozen worksites where federal immigration agents had visited. A man trying to get some goods at a South 24th Street store said he worked at Omaha's Nebraska Beef plant, which he said let him and other employees go home at mid-morning. Roger Garcia, chairman of the Douglas County board, announced during a county board meeting Tuesday that he had to leave because his community was 'being terrorized.' 'I have to depart,' he said. 'As we speak, there's word of at least two raids happening at this moment, so I have to go. I have to try and help.' He was among leaders posting in English and Spanish on social media to keep the community informed. Among the potentially targeted businesses Tuesday were Glenn Valley Foods, LALA's and JBS, processing and production plants in the eastern part of the city. Garcia said a company spokesperson told him there was no raid at JBS. State Sens. Dunixi Guereca and Margo Juarez of South Omaha gathered mid-morning with a half dozen other community representatives on South 24th Street. Guereca pointed at the quiet business corridor, the heart of Nebraska's largest Latino business district, and said: 'This is fear.' U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had no immediate comment on the moves. Local law enforcement agencies said they were not participating in the federal raids, but that they are providing agents and the public with traffic enforcement around targeted locations, as needed. Guereca said he was disappointed in the way federal agents carried out the operation, which he said created unnecessary fear for families, customers and merchants. 'Businesses closed their doors. Not only are folks not going to work, they're not consuming,' he said. Yesenia Peck, who heads the Nebraska Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, also came to the 24th Street district to check on businesses. As she approached one store, a customer was attempting to open the door, but it was locked. She said she knew of at least one foreign consulate office based in Omaha, the Guatemalan Consulate, that was sending a representative to an affected worksite. 'Everybody is scared right now. Businesses are closing,' she said. 'This is not life…' Peck said one merchant asked her, 'How are we going to pay the bills? Pay rent?' Martha Barrera, who owns a salon on 24th Street, said her workers have continued to accept customers, but she said people are in panic mode about what is happening outside the doors. She said she is happy that community leaders have offered information on rights and how to respond if federal agents were to come to her business or any others. She and others on the business corridor said their stores rely on Latino families and are worried about future commerce. Peck said she understands there are laws and people must abide by those. 'But this is not the way it should be done,' she said. 'Not cruelly.' 'What is happening right now is unbelievable. I've seen this kind of thing in other countries,' she said, including her homeland of Peru. 'It's just not the right way.' Saul Lopez, of LULAC National, was headed with other community members to pass out information about worker rights at workplaces and said a concern was for parents who might be separated from children. 'We're very worried right now about what's going on with the families.' A leader of an Omaha nonprofit that works with youths said Tuesday that the organization has been working to identify families whose working parent may have been detained and separated from their children. So far, the organization's leader said at least two kids in their care who are from two different families have a parent caught up in the operations. The organization was busy getting a hold of emergency contacts for the kids. Also Tuesday, immigration advocates and community leaders had turned a South Omaha organization into a sort of information headquarters to better understand and coordinate legal, outreach and response activities. This is a developing story. It was last updated at 2:25 p.m. on Tuesday, June 10. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Docs: Plane crash that killed Scott Bloomquist ruled a suicide
Docs: Plane crash that killed Scott Bloomquist ruled a suicide

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Docs: Plane crash that killed Scott Bloomquist ruled a suicide

HAWKINS COUNTY, Tenn. (WJHL) — The plane crash that resulted in the death of award-winning dirt track race driver Scott Bloomquist has been ruled a suicide, according to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). On Aug. 16, 2024, a single-engine Piper J3 flown by Bloomquist crashed into a barn near Mooresburg around 7:50 a.m. PREVIOUS: 'We are devastated:' Racing world reacts to death of Scott Bloomquist The NTSB determined the probable cause of the accident to be 'Bloomquist's intentional flight into a building as an act of suicide.' Bloomquist, born in Iowa, was a nationally touring Dirt Super Late Model race car driver. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

German chancellor accuses Russia of "serious war crimes" amid latest attacks
German chancellor accuses Russia of "serious war crimes" amid latest attacks

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

German chancellor accuses Russia of "serious war crimes" amid latest attacks

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has accused Moscow of "serious war crimes" following the latest Russian large-scale attacks on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities. Source: German TV news service Tagesschau, as reported by European Pravda Details: Russia has "purposefully and ruthlessly" attacked the civilian population of Ukraine with numerous drones and cruise missiles in recent days, Merz said at a joint press conference with Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof. The large-scale Russian attacks constitute "terror against civilians" and "by no means a proportionate response" to Ukraine's "very precise" attacks on Russian military airfields, the chancellor added. Background: On 10 June, Russia attacked Ukraine with 322 aerial assets. Ukraine's air defences managed to shoot down 284 of them. It was reported that a building near the EU Delegation to Ukraine had been damaged as a result of the Russian strikes on Kyiv. Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha has called for no delay in imposing powerful new sanctions against Russia following the large-scale airstrikes. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store