MANCHESTER, Ky. - The crash of a medical helicopter that killed three crewmembers in southeastern Kentucky on Thursday was the fourth deadly accident in the past six years for Air Evac Lifeteam, a Missouri-based company that operates from 114 locations in 15 states.
The helicopter that crashed Thursday night in Clay County had been completely refurbished just over a year ago making it "more powerful and capable of carrying higher gross weight," company spokeswoman Julie Heavrin said.
"We are devastated at this loss," company president Seth Myers said in a statement. "These were members of our family. Our focus at this time is on providing support for the family and friends of these crewmembers."
There was no patient on board. The helicopter, a Bell 206 LongRanger, came down in the parking lot of Paces Creek Elementary School outside Manchester, which is about 90 miles southeast of Lexington. Witnesses described a light fog, though forecasters said there was no severe weather in the area.
The last fatal Air Evac Lifeteam crash was in Arkansas in 2010. All three crew members were killed when that helicopter, a Bell 206 built in 1978, went down in Van Buren County. Heavrin said Air Evac Lifeteam has had two other fatal crashes in recent years. One in Indiana in 2008 killed all three crew members, as did the other in Alabama in 2007.
There have been 32 crashes in the U.S. involving Bell 206 helicopters since June 2011, with a total of 12 fatalities occurring in seven of the crashes, according to data from the National Transportation Safety Board. The most recent crash recorded was May 10 in Hartford, Ky. The pilot was not injured after the craft struck a power line.
The company identified the crewmembers as pilot Eddie Sizemore, flight paramedic Herman "Lee" Dobbs and flight nurse Jesse Jones. They were on their way back to base in Manchester after transporting a patient to a hospital in London, Ky.
Suddenly, "You just started hearing this `WHA-WHA-WHA,' and then it sounded like four, big `bang-bang-bang-bang,' like that," Kelly Bailey, who lives near the school, told The Lexington Herald-Leader. "And then you heard this big, huge boom."