Tag Archives: Newport

Newport Beach attorney accused of stealing more than $10M from friends, business partners to live lavish lifestyle in Las Vegas – KABC-TV

  1. Newport Beach attorney accused of stealing more than $10M from friends, business partners to live lavish lifestyle in Las Vegas KABC-TV
  2. A California lawyer stole more than $10 million in loans and spent it gambling in Las Vegas, lawsuit claims CBS News
  3. LA attorney who ‘swindled’ $10.2million from firm was sued by her beauty-guru after borrowing $70k Daily Mail
  4. ‘She’s texting us nonstop about various fake deals’: Lawyer accused of stealing $10.25 million via fake clients and collateral is allegedly still trying to scam the same company Law & Crime
  5. ‘Vegas Swindler’ accused of stealing $10m for epic shopping spree The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Virginia elementary school shooting: Newport News school remains closed through Friday to give students ‘time to heal’



CNN
 — 

The gun allegedly used by a 6-year-old boy to shoot his teacher at a Newport News, Virginia, school was legally purchased by the child’s mother, officials said.

The boy took the firearm from his home to school in his backpack Friday, Newport News Police Chief Steve Drew said Monday.

The teacher was “providing class instruction when the 6-year-old child displayed a firearm, pointed it at her and fired one round,” Drew said at a news conference. “There was no physical struggle or fight.”

The teacher was shot in the chest, through her hand, the chief said. She is in stable condition, he said.

Drew declined to comment on whether the gun had been secured in the home, saying more interviews and investigation were needed.

The boy is under a temporary detention order and is being evaluated at a local hospital.

“We have been in contact with our commonwealth attorney and some other entities to help us best get services to this young man,” Drew said Friday.

Once all interviews are conducted, police will present the information to the commonwealth attorney’s office to determine whether there will be any charges against the parents, Drew said.

The teacher was first identified by her alma mater, James Madison University, as Abby Zwerner.

The school, Richneck Elementary, will be closed this week to give students “time to heal,” the school announced.

The police chief, Newport News mayor and the school superintendent on Monday praised the response by Zwerner, school staff and other teachers after the shooting.

The police department received a call at 1:59 p.m. on Friday that a teacher had been shot, Drew said. When officers entered the classroom where the shooting happened five minutes later, they saw the boy was being physically restrained by a school employee.

The 6-year-old was combative and struck the employee restraining him, and officers took control, escorting him out of the building and into a police car.

The wounded teacher made sure all her students made it out off the classroom just after the shooting, Drew said. She was the last to leave her classroom, making her way to the administration office.

Newport News Mayor Phillip Jones discussed meeting heroes while a Marine and said Zwerner would be welcomed among them anytime.

“Abby was faithful as a teacher,” Jones said. “She ensured that everyone was accounted for and that she was the last one to leave.”

“What we saw were teachers who took immediate response to secure their students,” Newport News Public Schools Superintendent George Parker said. “To make sure they separated themselves from a potential threat – and they responded accordingly.”

The elementary school had an emergency plan in place that allowed for immediate medical care for the injured teacher, Parker said Friday.

“While no amount of planning can guarantee that a tragedy such as this will not occur; please know that our collective efforts and preparation resulted in immediate medical care for our faculty member, no injuries to students, and a safe and efficient reunification process for our families and students,” Parker said.

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A 6-year-old shot a teacher in class. Hear from an 8-year-old student who was down the hall

The school does not have a resource officer assigned to it, district officials told CNN on Monday. Only middle schools and high schools have a resource officer on campus, the district said, while elementary schools have security guards who do not carry weapons.

Richneck Elementary shares a security guard with a neighboring school, and the district could not tell CNN which school the guard was when the shooting happened.

The district also could not tell CNN if there were any disciplinary actions against the 6-year-old prior to the shooting.

As the investigation continues and police probe how the young boy gained access to a firearm and what led up to the shooting, community members are grappling with what happened.

“It’s a very difficult thing to process,” Mayor Jones told CNN on Sunday. “The fact that we have a 6-year-old individual with the ability to bring a gun into school and harm his teacher – something that we’re still grappling with.”

The mayor would not comment on the child’s family or their involvement with the investigation.

“There’s a lot of questions that we have to answer as a community,” the mayor added. “Up with, how a 6-year-old was able to have a gun, know how to use it in such a deliberate manner … The individuals responsible will be held accountable. I can promise that.”

Friday’s shooting was the first of 2023 at a US school, according to analysis by CNN. But shootings in US schools have become far more common than they are in any other country. In 2022, there were 60 shootings at K-12 schools, the CNN analysis shows.

Still, school shootings by a suspect so young are relatively rare. According to the K-12 School Shooting Database, which tracks shootings in American schools going back to 1970, there have been three other cases in which the suspect was as young as 6: in 2000, 2011 and 2021.

Students and a grandmother who was at the school described the harrowing moments in the aftermath of Friday’s shooting.

“We were doing math … an announcer came on, she was like, ‘Lockdown, I repeat lockdown,’” said fifth grader Novah Jones, who was not in the room where the shooting happened.

“I was scared … it was like my first lockdown and I didn’t know what to do, so I just hid under my desk like everybody was.”

Novah at first believed there was a man with a gun at the school, she said in a CNN interview with her and her mother.

“I was thinking that … a man was going to shoot us,” Novah said.

A faculty member ran into the main office to say a teacher had been shot, said Lawonda Sample-Rusk, who was picking up her grandsons at the school when the shooting happened.

She was frightened gunfire had erupted in one of her grandsons’ classrooms, she said. “I was about to walk down to their classrooms myself, but then the teacher who was shot ran into the office,” Sample-Rusk told CNN. “She was saying ‘Call 911! Call 911!’”

The teacher fell to her knees, Sample-Rusk said, and crawled behind a desk. A receptionist used a code word over the intercom to tell other faculty the school was going into lockdown.

Three or four other people were with the teacher, Sample-Rusk said, each helping to give her aid.

“The wound was in her chest area and everybody was taking turns applying pressure on her wound and trying to keep her aware,” Sample-Rusk said, adding first responders arrived a few minutes later.

Parents hurried to the scene as news spread of the shooting, living through a nightmare families of students at so many other American schools have shared.

When Mark Anthony Garcia found out about the shooting, he raced to the school, where his son is in second grade.

“There was police helicopters everywhere outside, traffic was jammed up,” he told “CNN This Morning” on Monday. “Then there was a 2-mile radius cordoned off of parked cars and people running, trying to actually get to the scene.”

Garcia’s son, Mark Jr., said his teacher heard the shooting and shepherded his class back to their classroom, “and then when we got there, we all stayed quiet.”

“Two people were crying,” he said. “And when the cops came, we were marching to the gym.”

Following the shooting, all students at the school were evacuated from their classrooms with their teachers and taken to the gymnasium, where they were with counselors and officers, the police chief told CNN affiliate WTKR.

Though she was able to return home safely, Novah said she had trouble sleeping that night, worried that “he still had the gun and he was going to come to my house.”

“I had like flashbacks,” Novah said.

Licensed therapists are available to help parents with tips for talking with children, counseling services and resource referrals, Richneck Elementary said in an update on its website.

Correction: A previous version of this story overstated the number of shootings last year in K-12 schools. It is 60.

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Newport News school shooting: How a 6-year-old got a gun and other questions that remain

Many questions remain unanswered after a 6-year-old student allegedly shot and injured a teacher at a Newport News, Virginia, elementary school.

Newport News Mayor Phillip Jones said in a statement this weekend that police were “working diligently to get an answer to the question we are all asking — how did this happen?”

Police tape hangs from a sign post outside Richneck Elementary School, January 7, 2023, in Newport News, Virginia.

Jay Paul/Getty Images

What we know

Abigail Zwerner, a 25-year-old Richneck Elementary School teacher, was shot with a handgun on Friday in a first grade classroom, police said.

She was initially hospitalized with life-threatening injuries.

“Abigail wanted me to tell you all … that she is in stable condition and she is thankful for the thoughts and prayers,” Newport News Police Chief Steve Drew said at a news conference Monday.

Zwerner was giving class instruction when the student pointed the gun at her and fired one round, Drew said, adding that there was no physical struggle or fight.

Zwerner took a defensive position and raised her hand, and the bullet went through her hand and then into her chest, the chief said.

After Zwerner was shot, she ushered all of her students out of the classroom, the chief said, adding that she was the last person to leave that class.

The chief called Zwerner “a hero,” and said she’s repeatedly asked how her students are doing.

No students were injured and the 6-year-old suspect was taken into custody.

A school sign wishing students a “Happy New Year” is seen outside Richneck Elementary School, Jan. 7, 2023, in Newport News, Virginia.

Jay Paul/Getty Images

The gun

Drew said officials were looking into how the 6-year-old obtained the handgun.

Authorities haven’t made public who owns the gun or how the 6-year-old got the gun into the school.

A motive has also not been released. Authorities haven’t elaborated on the altercation between the student and teacher but the police chief told reporters Friday that the shooting was not accidental.

A empty basketball court is seen outside Richneck Elementary School, Jan. 7, 2023, in Newport News, Virginia.

Jay Paul/Getty Images

The 6-year-old

The mayor didn’t release where the 6-year-old is being held but he told The Associated Press, “We are ensuring he has all the services that he currently needs right now.”

Asked by CNN on Sunday what will happen next for the suspect and if the 6-year-old’s parents could be held responsible, the mayor replied, “There’s a lot of questions that we have to answer.”

“Because it remains an investigation, we’re going to let itself work out before we rush to judgment at this time,” Jones said. “The individuals responsible will be held accountable — I can promise that.”

ABC News’ Meredith Deliso, Ivan Pereira and Ben Siu contributed to this report.

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Newport News shooting: Elementary student describes lockdown horror at Virginia school where police say a 6-year-old shot a teacher



CNN
 — 

As police investigate the circumstances that led to a 6-year-old boy allegedly shooting and injuring a teacher at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia, Friday, a student at the school described the harrowing moment the lockdown was called.

“We were doing math … an announcer came on she was like, ‘lockdown, I repeat lockdown,’” said fifth grader Novah Jones, who was located in a different classroom. “I was scared … it was like my first lockdown and I didn’t know what to do, so I just hid under my desk like everybody was.”

Novah told CNN in an interview with her and her mother that she first believed there was a man with a gun at the school.

“I was thinking that … a man was going to shoot us,” Novah said.

The teacher wounded in Friday’s shooting, whose injury was initially described as life-threatening, was listed in stable condition by Saturday, according to the Newport News Police Department.

Authorities and the Newport News public school district did not name the teacher, but her alma mater, James Madison University, identified her as Abby Zwerner.

The 6-year-old boy was taken into police custody, Police Chief Steve Drew said in a news conference, adding that “this was not an accidental shooting.”

There had been an altercation between the teacher and the student, who had the firearm, Drew said. A single round was fired and no other students were involved, he added.

Following the shooting, all students at the school were evacuated from their classrooms with their teachers and taken to the gymnasium, where they were with counselors and officers, Drew told CNN affiliate WTKR.

The shooting came just six days into the new year, with police swarming a campus that still had a “Happy New Year” sign outside.

As officers rushed to the school, Novah texted her mother, telling her there was a lockdown. “I texted her ‘Mom, help.’”

After receiving the text, “I couldn’t breathe I was in shock,” her mother, Kasheba Jones, said.

Though she was able to return home safely, Novah said she had trouble sleeping that night, worried that “he still had the gun and he was going to come to my house.”

“I had like flashbacks,” Novah said.

Novah is one of numerous children to grapple with the trauma of a shooting at school. Shootings in US schools, while still rare when compared with other incidents of gun violence, have become far more common than they are in any other country. In 2022, there were at least 60 shootings at K-12 schools, according to a CNN analysis.

As the investigation continues, the elementary school will remain closed Monday and Tuesday to give the community “time to heal,” Principal Briana Foster Newton said in a statement.

Meanwhile, community members are grappling with the age of the suspect.

Novah said she’s struggling to understand how someone so young could have a gun or pull the trigger.

Her mother echoed those questions.

“First of all, where did he get a gun from and how did he know how to aim it and shoot it?” Jones said.

Investigators will look into how the child obtained the firearm, said Drew.

“It is almost impossible to wrap our minds around the fact that a 6 year old 1st grader brought a loaded handgun to school and shot a teacher; however, this is exactly what our community is grappling with today,” Newport News Mayor Phillip D. Jones said in a statement posted on Twitter.

Authorities are “working diligently to get an answer to the question we are all asking – how did this happen? We are also working to ensure the child receives the supports and services he needs as we continue to process what took place,” Jones said.

“We have been in contact with our commonwealth attorney and some other entities to help us best get services to this young man,” Drew said Friday.



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6-year-old shoots teacher in Newport News, Virginia, police say



CNN
 — 

A 6-year-old boy is in police custody after he shot a teacher at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia, Friday afternoon, Police Chief Steve Drew said in a news conference.

“The individual is a 6-year-old student. He is right now in police custody,” Drew said. “We have been in contact with our commonwealth attorney and some other entities to help us best get services to this young man.”

Drew said the female teacher – who is in her 30s – was shot inside a classroom and added that “this was not an accidental shooting.”

The police chief said there was an altercation between the teacher and the student, who had the firearm, and that a single round was fired.

Drew, who had earlier said the teacher was in critical condition, said Friday evening her injuries were considered life-threatening but that there was “some improvement in the last update that we got.”

There were no other students involved, the chief said.

The investigation is ongoing, he added.

“We’ll get the investigation done, there’s questions we’ll want to ask and find out about. I want to know where that firearm came from, what was the situation,” Drew added.

Richneck Elementary School will be closed Monday, according to Newport News Public Schools Superintendent, Dr. George Parker.

“I’m in shock, and I’m disheartened,” Parker said in Friday’s news conference. “We need to educate our children and we need to keep them safe.”

“We need the community’s support, continued support, to make sure that guns are not available to youth and I’m sounding like a broken record today, because I continue to reiterate that: that we need to keep the guns out of the hands of our young people,” the superintendent said.

Officials are also looking into any past instances that may have transpired before the shooting, Parker added.

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Joni Mitchell Reclaims Her Voice at Newport

The highlight of the set, though, was “Both Sides, Now,” a song that a 23-year-old Mitchell wrote in 1967, the same year she played Newport for the first time. Back then, some critics scoffed at the lyrics’ presumptive wisdom: What could a 23-year-old girl possibly know about both sides of life? But over the years, the song has revealed itself to contain fathomless depths that have only been audible in later interpretations.

When she was 56, Mitchell rereleased a lush version of “Both Sides, Now” on her 2000 album of the same name, backed by a 70-piece orchestra. Her voice was deeper, elegiac and elegantly weary. “It’s life’s illusions I recall,” she sang at the end of the song, “I really don’t know life at all.”

That version was considered a tear-jerker (and used to this effect in a classic scene from the movie “Love, Actually”), but then again, it’s easy to find pathos in getting older. Aging inherently brings suffering, debilitation and loss — this is not news. What Mitchell’s 2022 performance of the song asserted was that it can also bring serendipity, long-delayed gratification and joy. Ever an expert re-interpreter of her own material, Mitchell breathed new meaning into some of her most famous lyrics. “I could drink a case of you, and I would still be on my feet,” she sang with Carlile, the line becoming not only a challenge to a lover, but a survivor’s boast to life itself.

Part of what is so heartening about Mitchell’s recent pop cultural revival, like Bush’s surprise chart resurgence, is that it allows a beloved if somewhat underappreciated artist to receive her laurels while she’s still living. (Wynonna Judd, still grieving her mother Naomi’s death, was also onstage with Mitchell and wept openly throughout “Both Sides, Now” — a visual reminder of a crueler fate and the inherent dichotomy of the song.) In a culture that excessively scrutinizes women as they age, or simply renders them invisible and erases their influence, it felt like a quietly radical act to honor Mitchell in this way. Younger artists got the chance to pay earnest homage to their elder; a mature woman who was not yet finished reinterpreting her life’s work reclaimed the stage.

Surrounded by an adoring crowd of friends, fellow musicians, and admirers — many of whom were not yet born when Mitchell wrote “Both Sides, Now” — she seemed to sing it this time with a grinning shrug: I really don’t know life at all. As if to say: You never know — anything can happen. Even this.

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Joni Mitchell Performs Surprise Show at Newport Folk Festival

Joni Mitchell, the revered Canadian singer-songwriter and one of the defining musicians of the 1960s and ’70s, surprised an audience in Rhode Island on Sunday when she appeared at the Newport Folk Festival to perform her first full set in about two decades, guitar in hand.

Mitchell, never one for the limelight, has remained largely out of the public eye since having a brain aneurysm in 2015. As she recovered, she made a few brief appearances: In December, she gave a rare public speech as she accepted a Kennedy Center Honor, and in April, made a televised appearance at the Grammys and was honored at a gala for MusiCares, a Grammy-affiliated charity.

But on Sunday, Mitchell, 78, wearing a beret and sunglasses, performed some of her most iconic songs, including “Carey,” “Big Yellow Taxi” and “Both Sides Now.”

At one point, Mitchell, an electric guitar slung over her shoulder, performed a several-minutes-long solo during “Just Like This Train,” as fans whooped and cheered.

“After all she’s been through, she returned to the Newport Folk Fest stage after 53 years and I will never forget sitting next to her while she stopped this old world for a while,” the singer-songwriter Brandi Carlile, who sang backup for Mitchell during her festival appearance, said in a Tweet.

Having “looked at life from so many sides,” Mitchell has come “out of the storm singing like a prophet,” she added.

Although Mitchell has limited her appearances in recent years, she has not avoided the headlines.

In January, Mitchell joined Neil Young in boycotting the streaming service Spotify, over its role in giving a platform to Covid-19 vaccine misinformation.

“Irresponsible people are spreading lies that are costing people their lives,” Mitchell wrote of the company at the time. She added, “I stand in solidarity with Neil Young and the global scientific and medical communities on this issue.”

On Sunday, several musicians, including Carlile, flanked Mitchell onstage, and sang with her. “I will never be over this. I can’t even watch it without the tears coming back,” Carlile wrote later on Twitter. “Please forgive me.”

As Mitchell and Carlile sang “A Case of You” from the influential “Blue” album, released more than 50 years ago, Mitchell sang:

Oh, I could drink a case of you, darling

And I would still be on my feet

Oh, I would still be on my feet.

The crowd roared.



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Tarek El Moussa gets in a pamper session with wife Heather Rae Young in Newport Beach

Tarek El Moussa and his wife Heather Rae Young were seen out on Tuesday following their heated exchange with his ex-wife Christina Hall (née Haack) at their son’s soccer match on Sunday.

The HGTV star, 40, and his better half, 34, were captured exiting a building in Newport Beach after treating themselves to a bit of afternoon pampering.

Tarek cut a casual figure in a black graphic tee and a pair of comfy black drawstring sweatpants while Heather concealed her slender physique beneath a cropped black hooded sweatshirt and a pair of matching sweatpants.

Spotted: Tarek El Moussa and his wife Heather Rae Young were seen out on Tuesday following their heated exchange with his ex-wife Christina Hall at their son’s soccer match on Sunday

The Selling Sunset star completed her getup with some fluffy leopard print slippers and a black backpack.

She strolled towards the couple’s car with her cellphone and a bottle of water in her hands.

Heather’s bright blonde hair was styled in an updo and she let her natural beauty shine by going makeup-free for her outing with Tarek. 

Pampering: The HGTV star, 40, and his better half, 34, were captured exiting a building in Newport Beach after treating themselves to a bit of afternoon pampering

Keeping it comfy: Heather concealed her slender physique beneath a cropped black hooded sweatshirt and a pair of matching sweatpants

As she got closer to their car, the blonde beauty threw on a pair of big white designer shades. 

Tarek followed closely behind Heather before hopping into the driver’s seat and speeding out of the parking lot. 

He and Heather made headlines over the weekend after he had to yank her away from his ex Christina over a ‘personal matter’ that ‘has since been resolved’ at their son Brayden’s soccer game, her rep told Page Six.

Tense: He and Heather made headlines over the weekend after he had to yank her away from his ex Christina over a ‘personal matter’ that ‘has since been resolved’ at their son Brayden’s soccer game, her rep told Page Six

More drama: Christina’s third husband Joshua Hall was seen speaking nearly nose-to-nose with Tarek near the soccer goals before a youth soccer coach ended up intervening before things got worse

Hours after the sideline spat, Christina had to rush their six-year-old son to the emergency room to undergo an emergency appendectomy as well as removal of Meckel’s diverticulum.

Christina is currently embroiled in a bitter custody battle with her second ex-husband Ant Anstead, 43, who recently filed for full custody of their son Hudson, two, accusing her of putting him at medical risk.

Christina shares Brayden and daughter Taylor, 11, with Tarek, who she was married to from 2009 to 2018.

Scary ordeal: Christina later shared that her and Tarek’s son Brayden, 6, had been admitted to the ER for an emergency appendectomy and removal of Meckel’s diverticulum on Sunday

‘Scary 12 hours for us parents + step parents. After being admitted to the ER, Brayden had to have an emergency appendectomy as well as removal of Meckel’s diverticulum early this morning,’ she wrote in the caption.

Meckel’s diverticulum is a small pouch located in the wall of the intestine, which is a leftover of the umbilical cord as per Cleveland Clinic.

Thankfully, the reality star went on to say that the surgery was a success and that her baby boy was recovering just fine.

‘Nothing like seeing your child in excruciating pain.. luckily the surgery went well and he is recovering and in good spirits.’

The ex: Christina and Tarek, who also share 11-year-old daughter Taylor, were married to from 2009 to 2018; Pictured in 2017

She wrapped up her caption by thanking staff at the hospital where Brayden was treated, as well as her current husband, realtor Joshua Hall, whom she married this year, as per PEOPLE.

‘The entire staff at Mission Hospital was amazing and we are all grateful it was caught early. Blessed to have 3 healthy + happy kids, caring family and friends and a husband who stands by my side. Happy Mother’s Day everyone.’

In a recent court filing, Anstead – who’s currently dating actress Renée Zellweger, 53 – blasted Christina as an unfit mother who only spent a few days a month with their son, using him for social media clout and risking his medical safety, TMZ reported.

It’s war: Christina, who got married to Joshua Hall (pictured) this year, is currently in a custody battle over youngest son Hudson, two, (right) with her second ex-husband Ant Anstead, 43

In his court filing he claims Christina put their toddler at risk, sending him home with ‘an awful sunburn that was so bad it left him crying in pain.’

In another explosive part, Ant says that Christina failed to inform him that her family had gotten COVID and returned Hudson to his care without proper precautions.

The move ended up shutting down production on Zellweger’s latest film.

Full custody: Anstead recently filed for full custody of their son, accusing her of putting Hudson at medical risk and only spending a few days a month with him; Pictured in 2020

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Police Helicopter Crashes in Water in Newport Beach – NBC Los Angeles

A Huntington Beach police helicopter crashed into the water in Newport Beach Saturday afternoon, leaving one officer dead and another in critical condition, the Huntington Beach Police Department said.

The two officers were responding to a disturbance fight call in Newport Beach when it crashed into the water, Huntington Beach police chief Eric Parra said in a press conference Saturday.

The officer who died was identified as 44-year-old Nicholas Vella, a 14 year veteran of the Huntington Beach Police Department.

The crash appeared to have happened not far from the shore off the Balboa Peninsula.

Both occupants were transported to local trauma centers, authorities said.

One person was transported to the UCI trauma center and the second person who was trapped was transported to OC Global trauma center.

The initial call of the incident came in at approximately 6:34 p.m. near 42 Balboa Blvd. in Newport Beach.

This is a developing story, please check back for details.



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Police helicopter crashes in water off Newport Beach in Orange County, 2 pilots trapped and rescued

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (KABC) — A police helicopter has crashed in the waters off Newport Beach in Orange County Saturday night.

The crash happened shortly after 6:30 p.m. Two pilots were on board at the time of the crash, and became trapped in the wreckage, according to officials. Both were rescued and taken to the hospital in unknown condition.

The Huntington Beach Police Department confirmed that it was their police helicopter that crashed.

Video from Balboa Island shows emergency vehicles racing to the scene.

“All of a sudden I hear something sputtering, really close,” a woman who saw the helicopter go down told Eyewitness News. “And it didn’t sound like a regular helicopter. And somehow, he managed to get it into the bay to save everybody’s life, because if he had landed on a house, there would be a lot of casualties. I feel very fortunate right now.

Another witness told ABC7 that they saw the helicopter spinning and descending rapidly into the water.

The cause of the crash is under investigation.

No further details were immediately known.

This is a developing news story. Please check back for updates.

Copyright © 2022 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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