Breaking news: Before the helicopter crash, David McCarty and his three granddaughters repeatedly called 911 to report a dangerous situation, but unexpectedly, just three minutes later, something unimaginable happened.
David McCarty, 59, and his three young nieces, were killed after a sightseeing helicopter piloted by him slammed into a slackline.
An Oregon businessman and his three nieces were killed in a New Year tragedy after a sightseeing helicopter piloted by him slammed into a slackline just hours before he was set to tie the knot. The businessman, 59-year-old David McCarty, was flying his relatives in his private MD 369FF helicopter through remote Telegraph Canyon near Superior, Arizona, just east of Phoenix around 11 am on Friday, January 2, when the chopper struck a recreational highline strung across the mountains, according to authorities.
David McCarty died hours before his wedding to Joelleen Linstrom (Joelleen M. Linstrom/Facebook)
“He just wanted to show his family around,” a relative told Fox 10 Phoenix.
The helicopter was sent plunging to the canyon floor, killing everyone on board.
McCarty died alongside his nieces Rachel McCarty, 23, Faith McCarty, 21, and Katelyn Heideman, 22.
Who was David McCarty?
McCarty was the owner of Columbia Basin Helicopters, a business specializing in power-line construction, logging, firefighting and aircraft recovery. An experienced pilot, he had flown the canyon many times before without incident, relatives said. McCarty founded Columbia Basin Helicopters in the mid-to-late 1990s, per the New York Post.
The company is based in La Grande, Oregon, with a satellite operation in Queen Creek, Arizona, where McCarty had a home. According to his family members, he owned several helicopters and was familiar with the area’s terrain.
The four victims, from Oregon, were in Arizona for what was meant to be a celebratory family weekend, the East Oregonian reported. The crash took place just hours before McCarty was set to marry his fiancée, Joelleen Linstrom. The helicopter departed from Pegasus Airpark in Queen Creek before striking the slackline mid-flight just south of Superior, according to the Arizona Republic.
A witness said they saw the rotor blades shear off before the chopper dropped. Search-and-rescue crews had to hike into the rugged canyon terrain because of its remote location. Deputies reached the wreckage around 5 pm. All four victims were pronounced dead later that evening, the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office said.