We’re now closing this blog. You can read our full report on the tragedy on the Hudson here:
A few more pictures from the crash site have dropped on the picture wires:
At least 38 people have died in helicopter accidents in New York City since 1977, when an accident on a skyscraper landing pad led the city to start putting restrictions on where choppers could land.
In just the past 10 years, there have been four helicopter crashes in the city, not including the tragedy on Thursday:
In 2021, a helicopter sustained significant damage during a hard landing at a Manhattan helipad. The pilot and a co-pilot were not hurt.
In 2019, a helicopter used for executive travel hit the roof of a Manhattan skyscraper in restricted airspace. The pilot was killed.
In a second crash in 2019, a charter helicopter went into the Hudson River and sank while being maneuvered at a heliport. The pilot escaped.
In 2018, five people drowned when a charter helicopter offering “open door” flights crashes in the East River. The pilot survived.
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New Yorkers were jogging and walking along the sidewalk near the Hudson as normal on Thursday evening, overlooking the scene of the crash and with emergency boats still visible across the water on the New Jersey side, blue lights flashing.
Software engineers and friends Mike Jones, 37, and Omar Mohamed, 21, said they were out for a walk during a break and they had heard the news of the crash.
“It seems that helicopters crash a lot. And I’m afraid of heights anyway so helicopters are a no-go for me,” Jones said.
Mohamed said: “There was just another helicopter crash, right?”, recalling the helicopter crash in Washington DC at the end of January, when a military flight collided in midair with a passenger plane coming in to land. All people aboard both flights were killed.
Asked whether he would take a tourist helicopter flight around New York City, he said: “If I were to do something like that, I would spend a lot of time looking for credible companies that have less history of crashing.”
Meanwhile, a young mother who declined to give her name was shepherding her two children on small bicycles and said “probably not” when asked whether she would take a tourist helicopter flight in the city.
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The New Jersey senator Cory Booker said he is “heartbroken” about the victims of the helicopter crash in the Hudson River.
“I’m grateful for the swift action by emergency responders,” he posted on X.
Booker added that his office is closely monitoring the situation and has been touch with local and federal authorities.
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Several people have been confirmed dead after a helicopter crashed in the Hudson River in New York City.
Our video editors have put together this video report:
The deputy mayor for public safety, Kaz Daughtry, said that four people were declared dead at the scene and two were taken to the hospital, believed to be in New Jersey.
Police personnel from New York rushed to the scene. “We were met by first responders” who tried to revive the victims at the shoreline, he said.
“They told us they did everything they could to try to save those victims,” Daughtry said.
The failure to save them had clearly been traumatic for the personnel, Daughtry said. “You could see the trauma on their faces,” he said.
Mayor Eric Adams had said moments before “our hearts go out to the family of those who were onboard”.
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What we know so far about the New York helicopter crash that killed six people
Here’s what we know about the helicopter crash into the Hudson River on Thursday afternoon, which left six people dead.
All six people aboard the helicopter – the pilot, two additional adults and three children – were killed. Four people were pronounced dead at the scene and two others were taken to the hospital, where they “succumbed to their injuries”.
The names and ages of the victims are being withheld at this time, pending family notification. Preliminary information suggests that the passengers included a family visiting from Spain.
The aircraft operated by a firm called New York Helicopters departed at 2.59pm ET and appeared to lose control, hitting the water upside down near Lower Manhattan at around 3.15pm and becoming submerged in the water.
The helicopter was identified as a Bell 206, a model widely used in commercial and government aviation, including by sightseeing companies, TV news stations and police departments.
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In further detail from the authorities, the NYPD commissioner Jessica Tisch said that after the aircraft, operated by a firm called New York Helicopters, took off from the heliport at the southern end of Manhattan, it flew north up the river until it reached the George Washington Bridge.
The landmark bridge, the busiest road bridge in the world, connects uptown Manhattan with New Jersey, about 10 miles (16km) upstream from the New York Harbor.
Tisch said that when it reached the bridge, it turned around and began flying south again. That was when it appeared to fly out of control.
She did not confirm reports of the aircraft starting to disintegrate in the air, saying that all such details are under investigation.
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A map showing the helicopter’s flight path before it crashed has been released by news agencies.
Earlier reports said the helicopter was in the air for about 15 minutes before it plummeted into water near the Holland Tunnel.
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Four people pronounced dead on scene, says NYPD commissioner
According to the flight manifest, six people were onboard the helicopter when it crashed, the New York City police commissioner Jessica Tisch said.
The manifest showed one pilot, two adult passengers and three children, she said.
New York police department divers pulled four people from the crash site, and New York City fire department divers recovered an additional two people, she said.
Four victims were pronounced dead on scene, and two more were removed to local hospitals “where both succumbed to their injuries”, she said.
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The New York City police commissioner Jessica Tisch said the investigation is ongoing.
At approximately 3.17pm ET this afternoon, multiple 911 calls began coming in, reporting a helicopter crashing into the Hudson River, she said.
The first units arrived at the site within minutes, with NYPD divers entering the water along with rescue personnel from the New York City fire department port authority and various New Jersey agencies, she said.
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Helicopter appeared to lose control before crashing into water, says NYPD commissioner
“The helicopter hit the water inverted, we believe,” New York police department commissioner Jessica Tisch said at the press conference.
She said the helicopter had appeared to lose control before it crashed into the water.
Kaz Daughtry, the deputy mayor of New York City for public safety, said that all efforts were made to try to save the lives of the victims after they were retrieved from the water, to no avail.
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Family visiting from Spain killed in crash, says mayor Eric Adams
The New York City mayor Eric Adams said his thoughts were with the families of those who had been onboard and all six people who were onboard the helicopter.
The investigation is ongoing, Adams said.
He said officials began receiving multiple calls at approximately 3.17pm ET about a helicopter that had crashed into the water.
Three adults and three children were onboard the Bell 206 helicopter that had left from downtown Skyport, Adams said.
The victims are a pilot and a family believed to have been visiting from Spain, he said.
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Three adults and three children killed in crash, says New York City mayor
New York City mayor Eric Adams has confirmed that six people have been pronounced dead, including three children and three adults:
All six victims have been removed from the water and sadly all six victims have been pronounced deceased.
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Officials hold press conference
Kaz Daughtry, the deputy mayor of New York City for public safety, has begun speaking at a news conference also attended by New York City mayor Eric Adams, the New York police department commissioner Jessica Tisch, , and the New York fire department commissioner Robert Tucker.
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The police have brought the press to the edge of the water, at the end of the pier, ready for an expected press conference from the New York mayor Eric Adams.
Emergency responder boats can still be seen, with blue lights flashing, towards the far bank of the river.
There are strong tidal and river currents in this area, just upstream from the New York harbor, where the Statue of Liberty stands at the approach to the city.
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According to the flight-tracking website Flightradar24, the helicopter was in the air for about 15 minutes before crashing.
Flightradar24 said the aircraft involved was a Bell 206L-4 LongRanger IV with an N216MH registration.
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A witness described seeing the helicopter “splitting in two” with one of its blades “flying off in the sky”.
“It sounded like a sonic boom,” the witness told ABC News.
I look up and … see a helicopter splitting in two with the rotor flying off in the sky. It was going so fast, it went straight into the water.
“I’ve never seen anything like that,” they added.
At this hour, witnesses can see a host of emergency responder boats on the river close to the New Jersey side , and a crane is on a floating platform in the river, presumably trying to raise the sunken helicopter.
The Hudson River runs up the west side of Manhattan and divides New York City on the west from the neighboring state of New Jersey, directly across the water.
AP reports that all aboard the helicopter are dead, six fatalities in total. Those observing await official confirmation.
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The New York representative Grace Meng said she is “devastated” to learn about the deadly helicopter crash in the Hudson River.
“Aviation accidents are becoming far too common,” she posted on X, adding that her heart is with all of the victims and their families.
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The spot where the helicopter crashed is less than three miles (4.8km) south of where US Airways Capt Chesley Sullenberger expertly landed the passenger plane he was piloting, on the water, with no lives lost, after the engines were put out in a bird strike after take-off from the airport.
The 2009 rare successful emergency landing on water became known as the miracle on the Hudson. But the scene at the Hudson today is grim, as New York fire department divers emerge from the water.
The scene is close to the bottom of the island of Manhattan, within sight of the Statue of Liberty and the One World Trade skyscraper at the site of the 11 September 2001 terrorist attack that brought down the original twin towers of the World Trade Center, killing almost 3,000 people.
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New York mayor Eric Adams calls crash 'heartbreaking and tragic'
The New York City mayor, Eric Adams, said his team are at the scene of the “heartbreaking and tragic crash” in the Hudson River.
“Please avoid the area near Pier 40 in Manhattan in the meantime,” Adams posted to X.
New Jersey governor Phil Murphy said he had been briefed by law enforcement on the “tragic” incident.
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Police and fire crews have been pictured responding to the scene of the crash.
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New York mayor Eric Adams to hold news briefing soon
New York City mayor Eric Adams is expected at the pier shortly to talk to those assembled, including the media. The tourist helicopter that went down is not visible from the city end of the pier at this time, as the emergency authorities continue to work the scene.
Conditions are murky with a light but brisk breeze. Fire department scuba teams are emerging from the water.
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The helicopter was a tourist helicopter, which took off from lower Manhattan, media reports say. It crashed on the New Jersey side of the Hudson river.
Rescuers are trying to secure the wreckage, which can be seen floating upside down in the river.
In steady rain and light winds, a large number of emergency response craft are circling in the grey water of the Hudson, and a series of fire and police personnel are coming and going under incident tape stopping the public and press from reaching the end of a long concrete pier sticking into the river from downtown Manhattan.
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Six people killed in crash, media reports say
An official has told the AP and ABC News that all six people onboard are dead. A New York City police spokesperson said that police boats were assisting in the rescue efforts on the Hudson, but details such as how many people were onboard were not immediately available.
The helicopter was carrying a pilot, two adults and three children, according to law enforcement sources. The family members were tourists from Spain, sources told ABC News.
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The FAA has released a preliminary statement, saying:
A Bell 206 helicopter crashed and is submerged in the Hudson River in New York City. The number of people on board is unknown at this time. The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate. The @NTSB will lead the investigation and provide any updates.
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Several people reportedly killed in crash
There are conflicting reports about the number of fatalities, but several media reports say a number of people have been killed in the crash.
According to ABC News, five people have died while rescuers are searching for a sixth person in the Hudson River.
News reports said a family from Spain and the pilot were onboard. ABC News quoted law enforcement as saying the family were two adults and two children visiting New York City.
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A helicopter crashed on Thursday afternoon into the Hudson River in New York City, city authorities said.
New York’s fire department said it had received a report of a helicopter in the huge tidal waterway that runs up the west side of Manhattan at 3.17pm ET.
Videos posted on social media showed the aircraft mostly submerged and upside down, as well as rescue vehicles crowding the streets on shore as an attempt to save those onboard got under way.
FDNY said it had units on scene performing rescue operations. Multiple rescue boats were seen on video circling the aircraft.
The rescue craft were near a site close to the Manhattan waterfront, near the end of a long maintenance pier for one of the ventilation towers for the Holland Tunnel, a busy under-river road tunnel connecting the city with New Jersey.
This is a developing story. We’ll bring you the latest updates as we have them.
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