A U.S. Customs and Border Protection helicopter crashed on Monday near Potrero, an area in the far southeastern reaches of San Diego County close to the U.S.-Mexico border, leaving one person dead, according to a CBP spokesperson.
The CBP Air and Marine Operations aircraft crashed during a border security mission north of state Route 94 and two miles south of Barrett Lake at around around 10 a.m., according to a CBP spokesperson.
One CBP Air Interdiction Agent, who was the pilot and sole person in the aircraft, was killed in the crash, CBP said.
No border patrol agents were aboard the aircraft as Air and Marine Operations is a separate component of CBP, a spokesperson with the agency clarified to NBC 7.
Get top local stories in San Diego delivered to you every morning. >Sign up for NBC San Diego's News Headlines newsletter.
SkyRanger7 flew over the scene shortly after the crash, which showed the wreckage in the middle of an open field at Sol Valley Ranch, a hemp farm.
Robert Katz, a commercial pilot who has been flying more than 40 years, told NBC 7 over the phone that FlightAware's flight tracker showed this helicopter taking off from Brown Field, about 20 miles west, around 9 a.m.
The helicopter is a Eurocopter AS350 B3 used for mapping by a company called Granite Coast Mapping. That company has an address in Coronado but not much more is known about the company.
Local
Katz said the flight track shows the pilot flying erratically before crashing, but the track log doesn't suggest anything was wrong with the helicopter itself. He says it was flying very low to the ground to begin with and with clear viewing conditions.
No other details were immediately available. An NBC 7 crew is in the area. Check back on this page for more details.