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Emergency flashing lights. Photo credit: OnScene.TV

Federal investigators were on the ground in the desert Saturday probing the fatal crash of a Burbank-based helicopter.

Six people died, including an executive of a Nigerian bank, his wife and son, and the former chair of the Nigerian Exchange Group.

The crash was reported at 10:08 p.m. Friday about a quarter-mile east of Interstate 15 near Halloran Springs Road, according to National Transportation Safety Board Member Michael Graham. The area is about 75 miles northeast of Barstow, just north of the Mojave National Preserve.

The Airbus Eurocopter EC130 helicopter had taken off from Palm Springs at 8:45 p.m. en route to Boulder City, Nev., according to Graham. The French-made helicopter was chartered from Orbit Air, LLC in Burbank, he said.

“This is the beginning of a long process,” Graham said of the federal investigation. Investigators will start at the crash scene “gathering perishable evidence,” and the probe will likely take 12-24 months to complete.

The passengers on board the helicopter were identified as Dr. Herbert Onyewumbu Wigwe, 57, Group CEO of Nigeria-based Access Bank, along with his wife and son, as well as Abimbola Ogunbanjoa, a former chair of the Nigerian Exchange Group, according to CBS News.

The pilot and copilot were not yet identified.

The NTSB planned to investigate media reports of downed power lines in the area and witness reports of rain and “wintery mist,” Graham said.

Witnesses reported seeing fire in the crash area, he said.

“May the souls of the departed rest in perfect peace,” Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the World Trade Organization Director General, tweeted on X. “My deepest sympathies and condolences to the Wigwe family, the Ogunbanjo family, Access Bank Group employees and Management.”

“The news of the passing of the chief executive officer of Access Bank Holdings, Dr. Herbert Wigwe, who died in a helicopter crash in the United States of America, has left me extremely shocked and devastated,” said Godwin Obaseki, governor of Edo State, located in the South-South geopolitical zone of the federal republic of Nigeria.

“We also unfortunately lost Wigwe’s wife and son, as well as the former group chairman of Nigeria Stock Exchange, Abimbola Ogunbanjo, in the crash,” he said.

“Wigwe was a colossus in Nigeria’s financial sector, leading Access Bank to become an international brand that placed Nigeria on the global map of first-class financial services,” Obaseki said. “The tragic incident is painful and heart-wrenching, and we pray for God’s abiding comfort in this profoundly difficult time.”

– City News Service