4 Oregonians die in Arizona helicopter crash

Approximate location of the helicopter crash that killed four people, including the 59-year-old pilot, two 21-year-old women, and a 22-year-old woman.
Winston Szeto / OPB
Four Oregonians died Friday in Arizona, after their helicopter appeared to collide with a recreational slackline stretched across a canyon. They were all from the same family.
Police in Pinal County, just south of Phoenix, first received reports of the crash around 11 a.m. An eyewitness reportedly saw the helicopter collide with a half-mile-long “recreational slackline” before it fell into a canyon, according to a statement issued Friday night.
Now the National Transportation Safety Board has opened an investigation into the cause of the crash, though it could take one to two years to reach a final conclusion.
The pilot was 59-year-old David McCarty, who owned Columbia Basin Helicopters based out of La Grande, according to the East Oregonian.
Also in the crash were his three nieces: Rachel McCarty, 23, Faith McCarty, 21, and Katelyn Heideman, 21.
Elizabeth Gallup, Rachel and Faith McCarty’s sister, confirmed the deaths in a Friday night Facebook post.
“Please continue to pray over every single family member as we process this heartbreak,” Gallup wrote. “All the love and support is welcome. We truly have no words right now.”
Philip Hofbauer of Ukiah, Oregon, had been friends with David McCarty since he was in the 5th grade. He told OPB on Sunday that David was widely respected throughout the area, and Hofbauer remembered working on the McCarty ranch in high school.
“I honestly couldn’t describe a better family,” Hofbauer said. “They’ve been a huge inspiration to me my whole life.”
An official with the National Transportation Safety Board said the agency will investigate the pilot, the aircraft and the operating environment. Although the agency will release its first report on the crash within 30 days, a final report could take as long as two years to compile.
Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the date of the fatal helicopter crash that left four people dead. It was Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. OPB regrets the error.




