A news helicopter was struck by a suspected drone, causing substantial damage


KABC's Air7 HD chopper was flying just east of downtown at about 1,100 feet when crew heard a pop, then a loud bang, reporter Chris Cristi

told the CNN affiliate

.

"We felt it, we heard it and we all looked at each other; didn't really know what it was," he said of Wednesday night's incident.

He thought a bird might have flown into the chopper -- but when the crew safely landed and assessed the damage, "it was a different story," he said.

The object had ripped through the tail of the helicopter and left other dents and scratches in other spots of the aircraft.

Cristi said the pilot saw a flash of light -- what crew believed could've been a

drone's

green and red navigational lights.

The Los Angeles Police Department said the event "could have been a disaster" if the damage had been more severe. "It was a scary couple of minutes," Cristi admitted.

The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the incident, KABC reported. The National Transportation Safety Board

also is investigating

.

Illegal drones cause headaches

If a drone did hit the helicopter, it might've been flying illegally. The

FAA requires recreational users

to fly drones at or below 400 feet in airspace where air traffic control is absent and bans drones from flying in controlled airspace near airports.

Los Angeles has a

similar ordinance

, banning people from flying drones over 400 feet or within five miles of an airport without prior approval from the airport's air traffic control staff. Users also can't fly drones in a way that interferes with manned aircraft.

Illegal drones aren't just a nuisance -- they're a real danger, authorities say.

Last month, firefighting planes sent to quell the Maria fire in Santa Paula were grounded for several hours after a drone sighting, the

Los Angeles Times

reported.

The National Interagency Fire Center said aerial firefighting efforts had been suspended at least nine times in 2019 due to drone interference.

A collision with the hard, plastic object could send a part of the plane into failure,

a 2017 FAA report found

.



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