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Huntington Beach police pilot fought to save helicopter before deadly crash, report says

A crane lifts a mangled helicopter out of the water as a worker watches
A Huntington Beach police helicopter is lifted out of the water in Newport Beach on Feb. 20, the day after a crash that killed Officer Nicholas Vella.
(Mindy Schauer / Orange County Register)
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The pilot of a Huntington Beach police helicopter desperately tried to keep flying before crashing into the ocean last month, killing another officer, investigators said in a preliminary report Wednesday.

The two officers were responding to a report of a group fighting in the neighboring city of Newport Beach on the night of Feb. 19 when the aircraft crashed in a narrow strip of water in Newport Bay between Lido Isle and the Balboa Peninsula. Witnesses said boaters rushed to pull the officers out of the helicopter, which landed upside down in shallow water.

The pilot was injured, and 44-year-old Nicholas Vella, a 14-year Huntington Beach Police Department veteran, died in the crash.

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A preliminary report issued by the National Transportation Safety Board said the helicopter was orbiting about 500 feet above the ground and the pilot had slowed to keep a camera aimed on the scene when the aircraft suddenly “yawed aggressively to the right,” meaning its nose veered in that direction.

The pilot tried to correct and stop the rotation, but the helicopter began to make a spinning descent, the report said.

Thousands of members of law enforcement attended an event at Honda Center following a procession that started in Huntington Beach.

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According to the report, Vella, who was the tactical flight officer, radioed to police: “We’re having some mechanical issues right now,” and then said: “We’re going down, we’re going down.”

Although helicopter blades can keep spinning from air flow with reduced or no engine power — a process known as autorotation that is taught as an emergency maneuver — the pilot told investigators that he wanted to keep the engine running because he was over a populated area, the report said.

“Because it was dark, he had no horizon or accurate external reference, but he could see the lights of houses approaching, and sensed impact was imminent,” the report said.

The pilot reduced airspeed and the helicopter hit the water on the right side, where Vella was sitting.

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“The pilot recalled a sudden smash and saw water and glass coming toward him as the canopy shattered. He felt the rotor blades hitting the water, everything then stopped, and within a few seconds he was submerged,” the report said.

The pilot used a rescue air bottle to breathe and managed to get out of the helicopter.

The cause of the crash will be determined at the end of the NTSB investigation, which could take 12 to 18 months, the agency said.

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