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British Columbia

Bodies of victims in B.C. heli-skiing crash recovered, says company president

Terrace Search and Rescue manager Dave Jephson also said last week that poor weather has hampered efforts to recover the victims' bodies.

The Jan. 22 helicopter crash near Terrace killed 3 and left 4 in critical condition

A helicopter touches down on a wintry mountainside. A skier can be seen from behind.
An undated photo taken from Northern Escape Heli-Skiing's Facebook page shows a helicopter landing in the B.C. mountains. The head of the company, which was involved in a fatal crash north of Terrace, B.C., last Monday, says the bodies of the three victims have been recovered. (Northern Escape Heli-Skiing)

The bodies of three people killed in a heli-skiing crash north of Terrace,B.C., last Monday have been recovered, the head of the guiding company said.

A statement from John Forrest, president of Northern Escape Heli-Skiing, said the RCMP along with Terrace Search and Rescue led the effort on Sunday.

The victims of the Jan. 22 crash have been identified as two Italian tourists and the pilot.

Terrace Search and Rescue manager Dave Jephson also said last week that poor weather had been hampering efforts to recover the victims' bodies.

In his statement on Sunday, Forrest said he knows how important it has been for their families to have their loved ones recovered from the mountain.

The days after the crash "have been filled with grief," he added.

"My heart continues to go out to all those impacted and their loved ones."

4 survivors hospitalized

Police have said another four people were badly injured in the crash.

One of the passengers had used a radio to notify the heli-skiing company of the crash, and crews with two other choppers in the same backcountry area joined in the rescue effort, Forrest told a news conference last week.

The four survivors were taken to a local hospital before being transported elsewhere inB.C. for higher levels of care, he said.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada has confirmed it deployed a team of investigators to the site of the crash.

The downed helicopter was part of Kelowna-based Skyline Helicopters' fleet.

A statement last week from that company's president, Teri Northcott, said the crash had caused "profound grief."

Skyline will "provide support in any way that it can," the statement said.

The company "will also work closely with the RCMP and other authorities as the cause of the incident is investigated," it said.