NTSB Issues Preliminary Report On Police Helicopter Crash

The report rules out a few possible causes, but the investigation remains ongoing

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Key Takeaways:

  • The NTSB has issued a preliminary report on the August 12th Virginia State Police helicopter crash in Charlottesville, which killed officer-pilots H. Jay Cullen and Berke Bates.
  • The accident occurred while the Bell 407 helicopter was re-routing from providing video coverage of a rally to escorting the Virginia Governor's motorcade.
  • The preliminary report states no evidence was found to suggest the helicopter was struck by another object, with security camera footage and witnesses describing the helicopter spinning nose-down before impact.
  • The investigation is ongoing, with wreckage examination complicated by damage from post-impact fire and impact with trees and terrain.
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The NTSB has issued the preliminary report on the August 12th crash of a Virginia State Police Bell 407 helicopter in Charlottesville, VA. The accident, which killed officer-pilots H. Jay Cullen, 48, and Berke Bates, took place while the helicopter was re-routing from providing video footage of the white nationalist rally in Charlottesville to escort the Virginia Governor’s motorcade. Lieutenant Cullen was ATP rated. Trooper-Pilot Bates had his private pilot certificate.

The accident helicopter over Charlottesville
The accident helicopter over Charlottesville on August 12. Courtesy of the Virginia State Police.

Though the investigation is ongoing, the NTSB report states that “no evidence was observed to suggest that the helicopter was struck by another aircraft, animal or object.” Evidence includes footage from a University of Virginia security camera that “shows the helicopter spinning in a nose down pitch attitude before it descended into trees” and interviews with 37 witnesses. All of the main helicopter components were recovered and the wreckage will stay with the NTSB for further examination. The examination has been complicated by the fact that many of the retrieved components were damaged by the post-impact fire and impact with trees and terrain.

Read the NTSB preliminary report.


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