CBS 6 EXCLUSIVE: Friends survive Bull Run, injured by falling aircraft

CBS 6 EXCLUSIVE: Friends survive Bull Run, injured by falling aircraft

DavePArrish

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RICHMOND, Va. (WTVR) – Brad Fillius, his wife and several friends drove nearly two hours from the Norfolk area to take part in Saturday’s Great Bull Run in Dinwiddie.

The group ran in the 11 a.m. race without injury and then headed to the stands to watch later runs. They assumed they were out of harm’s way, because they were a safe distance from the running bulls.

Then a remote-controlled aircraft carrying a camera above them fell from the sky.



“It was a pretty significant blow and it knocked the wind out of me for sure,” Fillius, a naval commander stationed in Norfolk, said.

Fillius recalled the crowd being excited to see the remote-controlled aircraft taking video from above. A few minutes later, the device fell and hit Fillius in the chest.

“What made it a little more significant was that it was that it was completely a blind shot,” Fillius said.

While he got the most direct hit from the aircraft,  his two friends felt the side effects as the device hit them too.

“Because I saw it, I was able to put up my hands to protect my face, but my fingers felt numb at first because they were hit by the propellers,” Eileen Peskoff said. Peskoff fell backward off her bleacher seat as the device fell toward her.

“It basically turned itself in to a missile at that point and it wasn’t like it dropped, it made a b-line,” Patrick Lewis, the third to be injured, said.

The injured trio headed to the medical tent where they were given ice packs for their injuries. All three admitted that nothing appeared to be a seriously injured or broken on their bodies. They claimed they spoke with event organizers who were apologetic and offered a full refund and an explanation for the crash.

“The reason that was given to us was that the UAV or the drone, the battery had died, and it basically plummeted because of that,” Fillius said.

CBS 6 spoke by phone Monday night to Scott Hansen of Virginia Beach. Hansen claimed to own the remote-controlled aircraft involved in the incident.

Hansen, who directs and produces films, also leases specialized camera equipment, including his remote-controlled aircraft camera worth about $7,500.

Hansen said he leased the camera to someone involved with the Great Bull Run, but claimed he could not reveal the name of the operator without breaking a confidentiality agreement in their contract.

(I suspect the FAA might want to see that commercial contract. Via Twitter Scott said this after we had been given his name yesterday:-

 @ScottHansenfilm @sUASnews not ours. We were flying at the east coast surfing championships all weekend. I heard about it though

 interesting times ed)

http://wtvr.com/2013/08/26/great-bull-run-crash-victims/

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