Medical copter crash in Oklahoma kills 2, hurts 1

OKLAHOMA CITY — A medical helicopter crashed-landed outside of an Oklahoma City nursing home early Friday, killing two people onboard and injuring a third who was pulled from the burning wreckage, officials said.

Only the flight team was onboard when the helicopter crashed while headed from Oklahoma City to Watonga, 70 miles away, to pick up a patient, said Fire Department Battalion Chief Marc Woodard. No one on the ground was seriously injured or killed.

A woman and man in the helicopter were killed, but nursing home workers were able to pull the lone survivor from the wreckage, and he was taken to a hospital in critical condition, Woodard said.

Witnesses said there were two explosions.

Rachel Njafuh said when she arrived for work at St. Ann Nursing Home, flames and smoke were pouring from the wreckage.

“My colleagues pulled a man from the (helicopter) just before a second explosion,” she said.

Oklahoma City only got a dusting of snow from the large storm system that has been moving eastward through the nation’s midsection this week. Woodard said the skies were clear Friday morning when the helicopter crash-landed about 100 feet from the front door of the nursing home in the northwest of the city.

“I think the pilot did a miraculous job landing it where he did,” Woodard said. “It’s 65 feet from a nursing home on one side and 150 feet from a retirement village on the other.”

Federal Aviation Administration investigators were at the scene within hours, combing through the wreckage of the helicopter’s charred remains for clues as to the cause of the crash.

One person on the ground suffered minor injuries and was treated at the scene, said Lara O’Leary, a spokeswoman with Emergency Medical Services Authority.

The helicopter belonged to EagleMed LLC, a Kansas-based medical transport company, O’Leary said.

In July 2010, an EagleMed helicopter crashed in a field in Kingfisher, about 50 miles northwest of Oklahoma. The helicopter’s pilot and a nurse on board the aircraft were killed in the crash.

On that flight, the EagleMed helicopter was headed from Oklahoma City to pick up a patient at a hospital 90 miles away. The National Transportation Safety Board has not yet released a probable-cause report from the 2010 crash.

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