Obituaries
Funeral Details For Late Helicopter Pilot Monroe Smith Set
Pilot Monroe Smith, 67, of Glenside, died in the 6ABC Action News helicopter crash on Dec. 19 in Washington Township, New Jersey.
GLENSIDE, PA — Funeral details for the Glenside man who died in the news helicopter crash before Christmas have been set.
Monroe Smith, 67, of Glenside, died on Dec. 19 when the 6ABC Action News helicopter he was piloting crashed in Washington Township, New Jersey.
According to Batchelor Brother Funeral Services Inc., Smith's funeral will be held at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 9 at Zion Baptist Church Of Philadelphia, 3600 North Broad St. in Philadelphia.
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An obituary for Smith was not available.
Also killed in the crash was photographer Christopher Dougherty, 45, of Oreland.
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The crew was returning from an assignment photographing Christmas light displays near Atlantic City when the crash occurred.
Todd Gunther, an investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board, told reporters near the crash site Friday that the Chopper 6 was returning to its base at Northeast Philadelphia Airport when something caused it to crash into Wharton State Forest.
“The aircraft hit at very high speed, and after striking the trees, it fragmented,” Gunther told The Associated Press, adding the damaged aircraft "was subject to a post-crash fire."
Investigators were able to determine that there was no in-flight fire or explosion, he said.
Examination of the main rotor and tail rotors showed damage indicating that they were turning when they struck trees, Gunther said, and the helicopter had power at the time of the crash and its transmission was functioning.
There is no indication the pilot broadcast any emergency warning, Gunther added.
Smith and Dougherty left Northeast Philadelphia Airport earlier Tuesday before departing to return home from their assignment around 8 p.m., investigators said.
The timeline is still murky, but at some point between then and midnight, they ran into trouble.
Conditions were clear and cold, Gunther said during a Wednesday press conference. And the chopper was on course during the entirety of its flight.
The wreckage was found at around midnight a few hundred yards from Mullica River Road, near Middle Road and Quaker Bridge Atsion Road, New Jersey State Police said.
The wreckage from the crash is being removed to a secure off-site facility, where it is being reassembled to aid in the investigation into the cause. That includes the nose, tail and both sides of the helicopter.
It could be about two years before the NTSB announces its findings into what caused the crash, Gunther said.
The debris field stretched for 200 yards in the woods, about twice the length originally calculated.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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