Idaho News

Pilot employed by Idaho company killed in plane crash while fighting Montana wildfire

In this file photo from the Payette National Forest, flames show through trees on the Rainbow Fire on Sept. 7, 2022. A pilot employed by Idaho-based company Dauntless Air was killed in a plane crash while fighting the Horse Gulch fire.
In this file photo from the Payette National Forest, flames show through trees on the Rainbow Fire on Sept. 7, 2022. A pilot employed by Idaho-based company Dauntless Air was killed in a plane crash while fighting the Horse Gulch fire. Payette National Forest via Facebook

A 45-year-old female pilot who was employed by an Idaho-based company died Wednesday in a plane crash while responding to a fire in Montana, according to the Lewis and Clark County Sheriff’s Office in Montana.

The human-caused Horse Gulch Fire began Tuesday outside of Helena, Montana, and has burned more than 1,000 acres in the Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. The Sheriff’s Office, in a news release, identified the pilot as Juliana Turchetti, an employee of Dauntless Air. The aerial firefighting company works with wildland firefighters and was on loan from Idaho to the U.S. Forest Service to help contain the fire, Idaho Gov. Brad Little and Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte said in a joint news release.

Turchetti’s plane crashed into a mountainside and landed in Hauser Lake, according to the Sheriff’s Office. It’s unclear whether Turchetti, a native of Brazil, lived in Idaho, Betsy Kirkeby, spokesperson for the Lewis and Clark County Sheriff’s Office, told the Idaho Statesman. Turchetti was the only person on the plane, and no other deaths or injuries were reported, according to the FAA.

“It’s a true act of bravery to run toward a fire,” Little and Gianforte said in their joint news release. “We join all Montanans and Idahoans in praying for the fallen hero’s family and friends during this tragic time.”

Lewis and Clark County Search and Rescue, working with a dive team from Gallatin County, recovered Turchetti’s body from the lake Wednesday night, the Daily Montanan reported.

The National Transportation Safety Board will lead the investigation into what caused the crash, the Federal Aviation Administration said

The fire as of Thursday afternoon was 0% contained, U.S. Forest Service District Ranger Sarah Rouse told the Statesman.

This story was originally published July 11, 2024 at 2:30 PM.

Elizabeth Walsh
Idaho Statesman
Reporter Elizabeth Walsh will cover science news for the Idaho Statesman for the summer of 2024, thanks to the American Association for the Advancement of Science Mass Media Fellowship. She is a graduate student in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University Of Nevada Reno. Support my work with a digital subscription
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