Nine killed in helicopter, plane collision over NY

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Nine people, including five  Italian tourists, were killed yesterday when a small plane  hit a helicopter over New York and both crashed into the Hudson  River, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.

He said there were five Italian tourists and a pilot aboard  the helicopter and three people on the plane including the  pilot and a child. Two bodies had been recovered but there was  no hope of finding survivors.

“This has changed from a rescue to a recovery mission,”  Bloomberg said. “There’s not going to be a happy ending.”
Search and rescue craft had rushed to the area in the  vicinity of West 14th Street in Lower Manhattan immediately  after the midair collision at noon (1600 GMT). Police divers  started looking for survivors and wreckage. The weather was  clear and mild.
Bloomberg said the plane, a Piper Saratoga, appeared to hit  the back of the helicopter, which immediately broke up and fell  into the river. Police had found one piece of wreckage in murky  waters and the search for bodies and debris would probably  continue for a few days.

The helicopter was operated by Liberty Helicopter, the  largest sightseeing and charter helicopter operator in the US  Northeast.
An eyewitness told the NY1 local TV station he saw a wing  come off the plane around the time of the collision. The  helicopter “fell like a stone” into the river, the witness  said. Others reported hearing a loud boom.

Chunks of debris also fell on the New Jersey side of the  river, narrowly missing motorists.
The National Transportation Safety Board said in a  statement it had dispatched a 10-member team to investigate the  collision.
In January, a US Airways jet with more than 150 people on  board crashed into the frigid Hudson River off Manhattan after  apparently hitting a flock of geese. All aboard survived.

The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association reports there  have been 70 midair collisions involving 140 aircraft in the  United States over the last 10 years. There were fatalities  aboard 83 of those aircraft.

Bruce Landsberg, president of the AOPA Air Safety  Foundation, said in a statement that “we should avoid  speculating about who did what or who is at fault until the  (NTSB) investigation has run its course.”