An Army National Guard helicopter crashed Thursday night during a training mission, killing the two people aboard, the military said.
National Guard spokesman Col. Tim Marsano confirmed the deaths of the two male pilots but did not release any details on them pending notification of relatives.
UPDATE: Spokesman says the helicopter sent out a beacon alert when it went down: http://t.co/bW1zN6yhiK pic.twitter.com/zCjmFThSY2— KBOI 2News (@KBOITV) November 7, 2014
The cause of the crash will be investigated by the Department of Defense, he said.
The Apache combat helicopter crashed at approximately 7 p.m. about two miles south of the National Guard base at Gowen Field near Boise International Airport, Marsano said. It wasn't immediately clear whether the pilots were heading to or returning from a mission, he said.
Plenty of Media staging on private property off pleasant valley road #gowencrash pic.twitter.com/1WPIcAyNZK— Andrea Lutz (@KTVBAndreaLutz) November 7, 2014
Marsano said he didn't know whether any communication was heard from the helicopter prior to the crash. There was no fire, he said.
The Idaho Army National Guard had 16 Apache helicopters at its Gowen Field training base.
Boise #Fire has cleared the scene. All media inquires will be handled by ID Army Natl Guard.— Dennis Doan (@FireChiefDoan) November 7, 2014
The Idaho Guard has a training area about 20 miles south of Gowen Field, but pilots also train over other areas, the spokesman said.
"The men and women of the Idaho National Guard are united in grief at the loss of two of our brothers in arms, who gave their lives while training to defend our nation," Maj. Gen. Gary Sayler, commander of the Idaho National Guard, said in a statement. "Today, our thoughts and prayers are with their families.
Boise firefighters initially responded to the crash but then turned the scene over to the National Guard, Fire Chief Dennis Doan said.