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Hiker From Downed Chopper Found

DEBORAH BAKER
,
AP
posted: 153 DAYS 15 HOURS AGO
comments: 165
filed under:
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SANTA FE, N.M. (June 11) - Searchers have found the body of a hiker who was in a state police helicopter that went down on a snowy Santa Fe mountain peak, but were still searching for the pilot.
Police Lt. Eric Garcia said Megumi Yamamoto, a University of New Mexico physics graduate student from Tokyo, was found dead by rescuers Thursday. He said her family in Tokyo has been notified.
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The chopper went down Tuesday night after it had just rescued the University of New Mexico student. The chopper carried the hiker, the pilot and state police officer Wesley Cox, who managed to reach safety Wednesday.
Rescue efforts were hampered by snow, low clouds and wind Wednesday. But the weather broke Thursday, allowing Black Hawk helicopters to airlift searchers as close as they could to the wreckage to look for Yamamoto and the pilot, state police Sgt. Andy Tingwall.
Just before smashing into the mountain Tuesday night, the sleek police copter, designed for just such high-altitude rescue missions, picked up Yamamoto after she become stranded while hiking.
Cox's right leg was crushed, his back injured. Soon, hypothermia set in. He hunkered down for the night inside the downed chopper with his pilot within earshot. Through the night, Tingwall and Cox alternately called out to each other.
When daybreak came Wednesday, Cox, badly injured and uncertain where Tingwall was, decided he needed to hike out for help, broken bones and all. He walked less than a mile before finding help and was rushed to a hospital with severe hypothermia.
Authorities spent the rest of Wednesday searching the mountains near the crash for signs of the pilot and Yamamoto, who was in New Mexico on a student visa and had been camping with a boyfriend, also a student at the university.
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Cox had told police when he went back to the helicopter, he checked the hiker's vital signs and concluded that she died from injuries from the crash.
When asked about Tingwall's condition Wednesday, State Police Chief Faron Segotta said: "We're being optimistic."
Late Wednesday, two crews located the helicopter's fuselage and other debris that had been scattered down the mountainside, but there was still no sign of Tingwall or Yamamoto. The chief said the debris field stretched about 800 feet in steep terrain.
The crash occurred northeast of Baldy peak in the Santa Fe Mountains, at about 12,000 feet, officials said. A crew of 18 people hiked through the night in an effort to reach the lower end of the debris field.
Segotta said information about the crash and details of the frightening night on the mountain came from Cox, 29, who remained hospitalized with a back injury, possibly a fracture, and a "seriously crushed" right leg, according to the chief. He also said Cox has some internal bleeding.
Tingwall, of Santa Fe, had radioed in his last radio transmission Tuesday night that he had hit the mountain.
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Segotta said three campers near Lake Stewart saw the helicopter take off and fly around the north side of the mountain, then heard its rotors rev to a high pitch. They then saw a flash of light and heard the crash, he said.
The helicopter may have crashed into the mountainside after the tail rotor hit something and subsequently failed to gain enough altitude to negotiate a safe landing, he said.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-06-10 05:15:36

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08:23 PMJun 12 2009

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Capkirk1235

07:26 PMJun 11 2009

Condolences to Officer Andrew Tingwall's family ...to the NMSP family and to the young lady Ms Yamamoto's family. And good wishes to Officer Cox on his rehabilitation. These men put their lives on the line daily...as all law enforcement, fire, ems personnel do and for very little pay....I work with them and everyday I get behind that radio I say a prayer they get to go home to their loved ones....just like the rest of you do. To the idiots out there.....they will still respond to your calls for help no matter how little you appreciate their work...just like our soldiers fighting for our freedom these men and women will rescue your sorry asses so you can have the ability to truly show how much you lack intelligence and compassion

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Brycetruck

06:49 PMJun 11 2009

Just when I think I'm having a bad day. R.I.P.

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(3)

EXCURSIONER

06:44 PMJun 11 2009

You morons (laurelphot & Mr Puffy1)People lost their lives here. Good people that had everything to live for. The unfortunate student who got lost, then rescued, then died in the rescure attempt. The heroic pilots who put their life on the line to try to rescue the lost hiker. They didn't have to go into the mountains to look for and rescue the lost hiker. They did it because they cared about their fellow man. As a helicopter pilot I can tell you that every helicopter pilot worth his salt knows it is dangerous operating a hilicopter at high altitudes. Yet these guys went anyway. They paid for their humanity with their life and limb. You arm chair critics that have never risked anything to help another can sit comfortably in your chairs bad mouthing the heroic actions of people that would come to your rescue if needed. You should be ashamed of yourselves!May you think more clearly about your words in the future.

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Meeka90

06:29 PMJun 11 2009

Apparently God had other plans for him...Or there is some other unseen force of the universe... because it is obvious the guy was supposed to die... and the pilot who helped out obviously died for being an accomplice to help this man stay alive... haha I AM KIDDING. I don't know what I am talking about!

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JusBythew

06:12 PMJun 11 2009

Mr Puffy1...Dude if you don't like being picked on here's what you should do: get a live size picture of Phil Spector's mug shot, stare at if for at least 8 hours a day, 7 days a week. That's torture.

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RON1077

05:49 PMJun 11 2009

For those with comments unbecoming a Human Being let me say that if New Mexico, let alone, the Federal Government forbid hikers from these altitudes you'd be one of the first to bitch and wine. A brave man died trying to save someone in distress who would have died without the effort. Flying, driving, riding a bicycle, jogging or whatever. The unexpected can take your life. I'm a Medic. I see the terrible results of drunken driving. Motorcycle crashes, etc. It only takes one mistake. How many times have you done something and realized you could have been killed.

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RashasBetter

05:46 PMJun 11 2009

Mr Puffy1, Laurelphot... quite possibly the two stupidest comments ever made on any subject.

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JoePIE48

05:33 PMJun 11 2009

Another "FOOL" responsible for putting rescuers in danger & exacting the ultimate sacrifice from the rescuer.

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Laurelphot

05:26 PMJun 11 2009

Remind me not to get lost in New Mexico, unless I have anti-aircraft missiles to defend myself from the New Mexico State Police.

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One police officer survived the crash of a helicopter that rescued a stranded hiker in New Mexico\'s mountains. The hiker was killed; the fate of the chopper\'s pilot was uncertain.