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Mexico Update No Survivors In Mexican Police Copter Crash

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Mexico Update No Survivors In Mexican Police Copter Crash

“They All Died In The Line Of Duty”

The Mexican government helicopter previously reported missing by Aero-News has been found. It crashed west of Mexico City, striking a piney mountainside at 11,200 feet in what appears to have been controlled flight. There was a postcrash fire.

All nine aboard the aircraft died, including Public Safety Secretary Ramon Martin Huerta, Federal Preventive Police Commissioner Tomas Valencia, other officials, and the two-man flight crew.

The helicopter was not an Mi-17 as Aero-News speculated, it was a Bell 412.

The aircraft was taking the VIPs to La Palma maximum-security prison for a public ceremony swearing in new prison guards. The ceremony was symbolic of the administration’s intent to crack down on drug-fueled crime, even if they have to build prisons and hire guards to contain all the criminals. The ceremony was delayed pending the appointment of new departmental secretary.

Mexican authorities have dismissed suggestions of sabotage. Jose Antonio Bernal, one of the officials aboard the helicopter, had been threatened by drug gang leader Osiel Cardenas, who is incarcerated in La Palma.

Most of the other officials including Huerta and Valencia are closely associated with Mexico’s crackdown on narcotics traffickers, and the Cardenas/drug angle fed much speculation in the Mexican press.

But Presidential spokesman Ruben Aguilar told the press late Thursday that all signs pointed to an accident, although information is only preliminary at this time. “[W]e must wait for the results of the investigation.” In Mexico, civil air accidents are investigated by the Communications and Transportation Department.

Weather is more likely to be implicated. Mario Martinez, flying a chase helicopter, last saw the VIP copter enter a cloud bank.

More: aero-news.net

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