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- Two Bear Air rescues couple, dog after accident in Bob Marshall
by NBC Montana Staff Tue, July 30th 2024 at 3:38 PM MISSOULA, Mont. — Two Bear Air Rescue airlifted a couple and their dog from the Bob Marshall Wilderness after the husband was thrown from his horse and horse rolled over him. The victim and his wife were flown to Choteau and turned over to a ground ambulance. Two Bear Air Rescue posted the following: On Sunday we were dispatched to the Bob Marshall Wilderness for a subject who had been thrown off his horse and had the horse roll over him. We treated the victim and unpacked and wrangled the pack string pending Forest Service arrival to care for them the following day. The victim and his wife were flown to Choteau and they were turned over to a ground ambulance. And yes, Audie the dog got a helicopter ride out too!
- VAI Member Spotlight: Two Bear Air Rescue, Montana, USA By Jen Boyer July 2, 2024
Funded through a local philanthropist, nonprofit operator provides air rescue services and law enforcement support using a Bell 429. Since 2014, Whitefish, Montana–based Two Bear Air Rescue has provided free aviation support for search-and-rescue (SAR) operations in western Montana, northern and central Idaho, and eastern Washington and Oregon. Operating a hoist-equipped Bell 429, the nonprofit service is supported 100% by Whitefish resident and philanthropist Michael Goguen. Serving a Community Need - Two Bear Air Rescue is the brainchild of pilot Jim Bob Pierce and a group of SAR technicians who pitched the idea of a full-time emergency service to Goguen. Pierce, who owned Red Eagle Aviation at Kalispell City Airport in Flathead County, was regularly donating his helicopter, fuel, and time to assist on SAR missions while ferrying resources to ground crews. However, Pierce was only able to help when a helicopter was available; otherwise, crews had to hike on foot to find the lost and injured. Goguen agreed to fund the operation, with the condition that the service would be world class and free to the public. Gearing Up for SAR Operations In 2014, Two Bear Air Rescue launched operations with a twin-engine Bell 429 helicopter equipped with a hoist, an electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) camera, a tracking system, wireless intercom, night-vision goggles (NVG) capability, and other SAR tools. While the service is privately funded, the helicopter is associated with the Flathead County Sheriff’s Office (FCSO) and displays the police unit’s emblem. While Two Bear Air Rescue crews respond to missions regularly in Flathead Valley, they also fly across the state and to remote areas of Idaho, Washington, and eastern Oregon to assist with SAR missions that range from responding to climbing accidents and finding missing hikers to performing river rescues. Two Bear Air Rescue chief pilot James Heckman says the helicopter frequently makes the 1.5-hour flight to the remote mountainous area flanking McCall, Idaho, for rescues that include snowmobile accidents and injured hikers. But the crew has visited no region more often than their own backyard: Glacier National Park in northwestern Montana near the US–Canada border. The park welcomes 3 million visitors annually from around the world. Assisting Law Enforcement - The Two Bear Air Rescue crew often uses the EO/IR camera to find missing hikers in the backcountry as well as to locate people evading law enforcement officers. Using NVG, the Bell 429 crew helps authorities find suspects in hard-to-reach areas—especially in the woods. In January 2023, two people stole a pickup truck in Kalispell and led FCSO deputies on a pursuit through the Middle Fork Flathead River corridor. After deputies failed to stop the vehicle—choosing to terminate the pursuit in West Glacier due to wintry weather conditions—they dispatched a Two Bear Air Rescue crew to track the suspects by air. When the truck ran out of fuel, the suspects ran into the forest. The flight crew found them 100 yards from the truck and directed deputies to their location to make the arrests. Over the past decade, Two Bear Air Rescue has completed more than 1,000 missions, increased the size of its staff by six people, and continued to advance its use of new technology and specialized equipment, including Recco SAR helicopter detectors.
- One killed, two injured in plane crash at Elk River
By Idaho County Free Press A Spokane man was killed and his two sons injured in a Wednesday, June 12, aircraft crash at Elk River in Clearwater County. Contributed photo / Clearwater County Sheriff’s Office ELK RIVER — A Wednesday morning aircraft crash that killed the pilot and injured two passenger is currently under joint investigation by the Clearwater County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) and the National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB). According to a CCSO release, the deceased is Brian Orourk, 54, from Spokane, Wash. Passengers were his 21- and 14-year-old sons, both of whom were transported to Sacred Heart in Spokane by Life Flight. On Wednesday, June 12, at approximately 11:40 a.m., CCSO received a report from the Idaho Division of Aeronautics that there was an emergency beacon from a plane going off about five miles north of Elk River. Deputies and EMS were dispatched to the area of the beacon. Hillcrest Aviation had a helicopter in Orofino that had just completed some contract work and was available to respond to the area. While en route to the scene a 911 call came in from someone who had picked up two people along the Basin Road who had been passengers in the plane. The caller transported them to Elk River to meet with EMS. Two Life Flight helicopters were then requested to respond to Elk River. The two passengers reported the plane — a small single engine Cessna — had crashed and was on fire and that they could not get the pilot out, due to the fire. The Hillcrest helicopter was able to locate the crash scene but there was no where nearby to land. CCSO then requested a helicopter from Two Bear Air so that they could hoist someone into the crash scene. Hillcrest remained on scene and help guide a deputy and EMS 3.5 miles into the crash scene on foot. Life Flight staged a second helicopter at the Elk River air trip. EMS and the deputy arrived at the crash site and found that the pilot was deceased. They used a fire extinguisher that they had packed in to put out the fire.