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Procession for Huntington Beach officer killed in helicopter crash brings out hundreds of mourners

A procession of Huntington Beach police cruisers and officers on motorcycles escorted the body of Officer Nicholas Vella, a pilot who died Saturday when his helicopter plunged into Newport Harbor, from the Orange County coroner’s office to a mortuary in La Habra Tuesday afternoon.

A brief, cold downpour soaked several hundred mourners — including Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley, District Attorney Todd Spitzer, and dozens of officers from police departments countywide — who lined up along Shelton Street just outside the coroner’s office to pay their respects at around 1 p.m.

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After Vella’s family came out of the office, several openly weeping, a bagpipe player escorted their cars down the street as the sun came out.

The procession headed north up the 57 Freeway toward Community Funeral Service on Beach Boulevard in La Habra.

“It’s just heartbreaking,” said Ann Flores, a local resident who stood in the neighborhood just to the west of the coroner’s office to watch the proceedings.

Vella died Saturday when his helicopter crashed into the waters just off the southern tip of the Lido Peninsula in Newport Harbor.

He and another officer inside the department’s McDonnell Douglas 500N helicopter were in the air for about a half-hour before they got the call to head to the Balboa Peninsula in Newport Beach for a report of a fight.

Just minutes after they got to the area and hovered over Balboa Boulevard, their helicopter descended rapidly into the harbor.

A National Transportation Safety Board investigator said Sunday that one of them reported mechanical issues just before the crash.

An official cause of the crash, however, has not been released yet. The NTSB investigation into the crash could take anywhere from a year to 18 months, officials said.

Steven Booth stood on a nearby corner as the procession was getting ready to leave. Next to him was Henry, a calm and friendly golden retriever with reddish fur, laying on the sidewalk at his feet.

Henry, a crisis comfort K9 for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, was wearing his forest green vest with his name embroidered on it. Henry and Booth, his handler and a retired Sheriff’s Department employee, have been to numerous scenes of trauma affecting local police departments.

“Our job is just to bring a little bit of comfort to people during a difficult time — that can mean listening to them, or catching a few tears,” Booth said as a group of deputies petted Henry.

Vella’s death was hitting Huntington Beach police especially hard. Highly specialized units like air services are known for fostering a deep sense of community among their members.

“They’re a very tight group,” Booth said.


Source: Orange County Register

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