(CNN) -- Several times a day, helicopters land and take off from the helipad above Seattle's Fisher Plaza.
But this time was different.
The abnormal sound --
what the lead investigator described as an "unusual noise" -- gave away
Tuesday morning that something was amiss. What followed immediately
afterward proved it, as a news helicopter spiraled not skyward but into
the ground, bursting into flames with those flames spreading to several
parked cars in its path.
"I looked and the helicopter was almost immediately pitched sideways and off balance," recalled construction worker Bo Bain to CNN affiliate KING.
"And he kind of just nose-dove over the trees, and clipped the top of
the trees and crashed just on the other side of the street there."
The two people aboard the
helicopter died in the crash, and another person who'd been in one of
the three vehicles that caught fire was critically burned, officials
said.
News helicopter crashes in Seattle
The scary incident also
rattled a vibrant part of the Emerald City, falling a few feet from the
iconic Space Needle and not much further from the Experience Music
Project, Children's Museum and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
offices about a quarter-mile away.
What happened, and why?
Authorities offered little clarity in the immediate aftermath of the
crash, expect to promise to someday get an answer.
"We want to understand
what actually happened, so we can understand what we can do in the
future to prevent this from happening," Mayor Ed Murray said.
Man leaves car 'in flames,' bleeding
Owned and operated by Helicopters Inc.
-- a company that specializes in providing news-gathering choppers for
media -- the 2003, Texas-built Eurocopter AS350 was in the midst of a
seemingly normal Tuesday morning. While KING indicated on its website
that it sometime made use of the helicopter, it was being leased at the
time by CNN affiliate KOMO.
The helicopter had just
come from Covington, Washington, and was planning to head next to
Renton, said Dennis Hogenson with the National Transportation Safety
Board, which is leading the investigation. Bain recalled that it spent
"a minute or two" on the launching pad outside KOMO's offices when it
tried to set off again.
"A witness described as
the helicopter lifted off from the building and began to rotate
counterclockwise and subsequently crashed," said Hogenson.
One of them, Daniel Alejandro Gonzalez, told CNN affiliate KIRO
that he had gone outside to smoke a cigarette when he heard the
helicopter's engine turn over. "About 15, 20 seconds later, I heard it,
it sounded like in the movies -- when it goes into slow motion, when you
hear the ding, ding, ding ... and after that I heard it collapse. I
heard it hit the ground, and that's when I looked up."
Within a couple of seconds, the scene was ablaze.
Video showed what was
left of the helicopter immersed in flames, as well as a line of fire in
the street that engulfed several vehicles.
One man emerged from was
once a red car, but was now ablaze, with "his shirt ... in flames, his
head ... bleeding," Gonzales said.
"He walked about 20 feet and he collapsed."
The injured man -- in
his late 30s -- was taken to Harborview Medical Center in critical
condition, with burns over 50% of his body, said fire department
spokesman Kyle Moore.
A hospital spokeswoman,
Susan Gregg, said doctors at the level-one trauma center had sedated the
man, put him on a ventilator and were administering fluids. They were
still trying to determine the extent and severity of the burns, she
added.
Gregg said the man may have helped reduce the severity of his injuries by rolling on the grass, extinguishing the flames.
Media mourn loss of their own
Bain described the next
few minutes as "chaotic," with people abandoning their cars and one
driver who "made a U-turn and got out of Dodge as quickly as possible."
The area was already abuzz with commuters heading to work but,
thankfully, not many tourists as the Space Needle was still a little
over two hours from opening.
Still, while it could have been worse, the crash had a devastating effect -- especially among those who knew the victims.
Several media members were visibly shaken, with Murray describing KOMO workers "in a state of shock."
KOMO identified the victims as Bill Strothman, a former KOMO photographer, and Gary Pfitzner, the helicopter's pilot.
Strothman had earned 14
Emmy Awards during his career and was working as a freelancer after
having retired from KOMO. His son still works as a photographer for the
station.
"He was a guy who really
knew how his pictures could tell a million words," said an emotional
KOMO News Anchor Dan Lewis of Strothman, who also worked for the
helicopter leasing company that was operating the aircraft. "... He was
such a gentleman, a true gentleman."
Pfitzner too was a
familiar face at the station. "He always had a smile on his face," said
anchor and reporter Molly Shen. "He loved what he did, loved to be able
to fly and be up there above the city and see things from a perspective
that most of us don't get to see."
Seattle's mayor, Murray,
met later Tuesday with Strothman's family, having known the father and
son given their work in the news business.
"It just brought it home
in a very personal way," the mayor told reporters. "... It just reminds
us both that we are public servants. And people put themselves at risk
in your business."
'Just a part of the tail and burnt-out metal'
Arriving firefighters
found lines of blazing fuel in the street and thick, black smoke
covering the area, with "wreckage strewn across the lawn along with
wreckage across the street," said Moore, the fire department spokesman.
Their and other first
responders' prompt and "pretty outstanding" actions, as Murray described
them, helped prevent a horrific situation from becoming worse.
Ten tons of sand were
dumped in the area to absorb the helicopter's fuel, with vacuum trucks
later heading to clean up the site, said the mayor.
The Space Needle closed due to the crash, as did the city's monorail and parts of streets in the area.
The helicopter did not appear to any have struck any nearby buildings before its fiery end.
"What we have left is
basically just a part of the tail and burnt-out metal from the main
chassis of the helicopter," Moore said.
Investigators began
Tuesday morning to interview witnesses, assess the scene and gather the
wreckage in order to literally piece together what happened at an
off-site location.
Hogenson, from the NTSB,
said that his agency should issue a preliminary report in about five
days and a full report -- including the probable cause of the crash --
in up to a year.
The president of Helicopters Inc., Stephen Lieber, issued a statement offering his company's condolences.
"We mourn their loss and
suffering and our thoughts and prayers are with them," Lieber said. "We
will cooperate fully and completely with the National Transportation
Safety Board and provide to it whatever information it wants in order to
assist it in its work in determining what happened."
CNN's Mary Kay Mallonee contributed to this report.
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