Source: Radio New Zealand
Lance Corporal Nicholas Kahotea, of the 1st NZSAS Regiment, who died in a training accident in South Auckland on 8 May. Defence Force / Supplied
An inquest into the death of a special forces trooper during a training exercise in south Auckland hopes to find out what went wrong.
Lance Corporal Nicholas Kahotea fell to his death in May of 2019 while training to dismount from a Blackhawk helicopter onto the edge of a building.
Kahotea was leading his SAS regiment through what should have been a routine training exercise.
The men were excited to perform their first bump landing, a helicopter manoeuvre meant to get soldiers onto the roof of a building as quickly as possible.
It was part of a joint exercise with the United States military, using its top-of-the-line Blackhawk helicopters to train for counter-terrorism operations.
One of Kahotea’s fellow soldiers, whose identity is suppressed and can only be referred to as call sign 63, said the team was enthusiastic.
“I’m not sure whose decision it was but we were told the next [exercise]’s going to be a bump landing. And we were pretty excited about it,” he said.
“When we got told we were going to do a bump landing at nighttime it didn’t matter to us, we do training at night all the time. We were excited to get another skill under our belt.”
A bump landing involves setting just one wheel on the edge of a building and hovering steady while the troops step off.
Call sign 63 was first off the helicopter.
“I could see the dispatcher giving me the signal to go … I looked down and confirmed it was safe for me to drop,” he continued.
“I simply managed to step onto the roof, no worries.
“As the first man off the helicopter my job is to ensure the area at the front is clear and protect the people still on the helicopter. The threat to me and my team is out to my front. In this training exercise my main threat was the stairs off the roof, so that’s where I was looking.”
Two more soldiers dropped from the helicopter, and the exercise continued as call sign 63 moved to the stairs.
“When I got to the stairs I felt a tap on my shoulder, this indicated to me we were ready to proceed,” he said.
“I can’t recall if the next thing I heard was over the radio or if it was one of the guys behind me. It was saying man down, man down. No duff. One of your men is down on the other side of the building. No duff means it’s a serious situation.”
CCTV footage of the exercise shows the helicopter sway, as the gap between it and the roof inches wider.
That gap was the distance between life and death.
Kahotea fell several metres, sustaining catastrophic injuries. He later died in hospital.
This week, almost seven years later, a coronial inquest will recount the tragic event in detail and make recommendations to avoid similar accidents in the future.
Kahotea’s partner, Dr Sophie Walker, criticised the Defence Force’s approach to the exercise.
“A bump insertion is not a static or benign manoeuvre,” she said.
“This is a dynamic and inherently unstable balance. From a physics perspective, the Black Hawk’s mass means very small changes in altitude create very large force transfers that promote tail movement.”
She hoped the inquest would lead to answers and accountability.
“Our hope is that the findings of this inquest will ensure no other family will encounter the consequences of systemic risk assessment failure,” she said through tears.
“Loss is not something that just happened in May of 2019 … It is something that I wake up to every day. It is having to accept over and over that this is my life.”
Defence Force lawyer Sally McKechnie admitted it did not fully appreciate the risks of the manoeuvre at the time.
She said the NZDF had thoroughly investigated its processes since Kahotea’s death and had made improvements.
The inquest will continue through to Friday.
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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand