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Three people were taken to hospitals in critical condition after a medical helicopter crashed onto a California freeway Monday night, officials said.
The crash happened on eastbound U.S. Highway 50 near 59th Street in Sacramento, Officer Michael Harper, a California Highway Patrol spokesman, said at a news conference.
The injured were a pilot, a nurse and a paramedic, Sacramento Fire Capt. Justin Sylvia told reporters. They were two females and a male, he said.
One victim was trapped under the helicopter and had to be rescued with the help of passing motorists and passengers who lifted part of the wreckage so they could be rescued and placed in a waiting ambulance, Sylva said.
Sylva added that it was fortunate that there weren’t more victims and that the helicopter did not catch fire.
“We’re extremely lucky that there were only three victims. It’s unfortunate they’re in critical condition, but all of our ambulances were off scene with transportation and care being performed on these victims within 20 minutes of the incident,” he told reporters at the scene.
Reach Air Medical Services confirmed in a statement posted to Instagram that one of its helicopters crashed on highway 50. The company said it was “keeping all those impacted in our thoughts and prayers.”
No vehicles were involved in the wreck, which occurred at around 7:08 p.m., Sylvia said.
Aerial video from NBC affiliate KCRA of Sacramento showed the red helicopter on its side with a smashed cockpit and debris over the road surface. It had a white circle with a red medical cross on the fuselage.
Among the crowd on an overpass staring at the scene was local resident Brett Berkstresser.
He told KCRA that he was in his backyard Monday evening when he heard sirens coming from what seemed to be every direction.
“The sirens was crazy, just the amount of the emergency services,” he told the station.
When firefighters arrived, one of the victims was trapped underneath the aircraft, Sylvia said.
Only one fire engine had been able to reach the crash at that point, Sylvia said, and the fire captain at the scene asked civilian bystanders to help lift part of the helicopter to free the victim.
The freeway is expected to be closed for an extended period of time, said Harper, the highway patrol spokesman.
Sylvia said that while the three people who were injured were transported in critical condition, it was fortunate that the fuel aboard the helicopter did not catch fire.
“It being jet fuel that’s loaded onto these aircrafts, it would have been a very hot and intense fire,” he said.
Phil Helsel is a reporter for NBC News.
Patrick Smith is a London-based editor and reporter for NBC News Digital.
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