tirsdag 11. juni 2019

Helikopterhavari på taket av en bygning på Manhattan - New York Times

I 1977 havarerte et helikopter på PanAm bygningen på Manhattan og drepte 5. (Red,)


Helicopter Crash Onto Manhattan Rooftop Kills Pilot

The accident unsettled the city, but Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said there was no indication that it was linked to terrorism.
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Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York spoke to reporters at the scene of a helicopter crash in Midtown Manhattan. One death has been reported.CreditCreditPeter Foley for The New York Times



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For hours on Monday, fog had surrounded the skyscrapers in Midtown Manhattan, hiding the upper floors behind a gauzy, grayish curtain.
About the time the late-lunch crowd would have been signaling for the check, there were noises that seemed out of place, even in noisy Manhattan: the disturbing roar of an aircraft flying low, followed by what some assumed was an explosion.
A helicopter had crashed onto the roof of an office building and burst into flames.
Only one person, presumably the pilot, was aboard the doomed aircraft when it hit the roof of the 51-story building on Seventh Avenue and officials said that the person had been killed.
Still, as word spread and a smoky plume streamed through the fog, the crash unnerved New Yorkers who wondered whether it had been an accident or had been deliberate. And it rekindled memories of a far different day — Sept. 11, 2001, when jetliners commandeered by terrorists destroyed the twin towers of the World Trade Center.



But Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, who arrived quickly at the scene, said there was no indication of terrorism.
Mr. Cuomo acknowledged that the initial reports of the accident unsettled people. “If you’re a New Yorker, you have a level of PTSD, right, from 9/11,’’ Mr. Cuomo said. “I remember that morning all too well.”


On Monday, when visibility was little more than a mile and the cloud ceiling was about 500 feet, the crash prompted building evacuations as the police closed off streets and emergency vehicles rushed in. Firefighters who raced to the roof said they found a debris field. “There wasn’t many whole pieces left,” a firefighter said at a briefing.
The crash shook the building at 787 Seventh Avenue — one worker on the seventh floor said it “felt like a small earthquake.’’ Andrew Heath, 37, working on the fifth floor, said what he heard “sounded like a manhole cover had exploded.”
The police commissioner, James P. O'Neill, said the helicopter had taken off from the heliport on the East River at 34th Street at 1:32 p.m., 11 minutes before it slammed onto the roof.






Charred remnants of the helicopter after the crash.CreditNew York Fire Department
The helicopter’s home base was an airport in Linden, N.J., where Paul Dudley, the airport manager, identified the pilot as Tim McCormack. He said Mr. McCormack worked for the helicopter’s owner, Daniele Bodini, who he said commuted to the city from upstate New York. A woman who answered the phone at Mr. Bodini’s office declined to say whether the helicopter belonged to him.


The crash unnerved onlookers who initially wondered if it had been an accident, or had been deliberate. CreditJames Estrin/The New York Times.


The crash unnerved onlookers who initially wondered if it had been an accident, or had been deliberate. CreditJames Estrin/The New York Times
The fire commissioner, Daniel A. Nigro, said firefighters who arrived in little more than four minutes put the fire out as the building below, which houses the offices of a number of financial firms, was being evacuated.
Melissa DeRosa, Mr. Cuomo’s top aide, said on Twitter that President Trump had called the governor to ask about the accident “and to offer any assistance needed.”
There were several reports of a helicopter flying erratically near the East River not long before the crash. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the crash.
Wendy Slater, 46, was walking her pit bull Ewing on the East River near 20th Street when she heard the sound of a low-flying helicopter
“It was flying really low, going up and diving down, flying sideways,” she said. “I just thought he was going to crash right there in the river, but then he went north.”
The memory of the Sept. 11 attacks flashed through the minds of people in Le Bernardin, the three-star Michelin restaurant at the bottom of the building. The lunchtime crowd, eating lobster and drinking Champagne, was jolted by the noise. “It goes through everyone’s mind,” said Jenaro Mendoza, a waiter, recalling the terror attacks. Added a colleague, Antony Cordero, “You never know what it is, if it’s terrorism.”At table after table, cellphones started flashing alerts about a plane crash. Before long the chef, Eric Ripert, emerged from the kitchen and asked everyone to leave.
Upstairs in the building are a number of law firms, including Sidley Austin and Willkie Farr & Gallagher, and some operations of several financial services firms, including BNP Paribas, UBS and Citibank, as well as an office of CalPERS, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System.

Melvin Douglas, 50, said he was selling umbrellas on Seventh Avenue near 51st Street when he heard a loud boom. He said that he and others on the street did not know a helicopter had crashed, and that they only realized something was wrong when people started streaming out of the tower.
“Nobody knew what was really going on,” Mr. Douglas said. “We couldn’t see anything because it was so cloudy.”







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