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Clutha pub helicopter crash: All fatalities named

Police officers line the street as the wreckage of the police three-tonne Eurocopter is taken away by lorry after being lifted from the Clutha Vaults pub.
Police officers line the street as the wreckage of the police three-tonne Eurocopter is taken away by lorry after being lifted from the Clutha Vaults pub.

The remaining four fatalities of the Glasgow helicopter crash have been named by police.

They were identified as Robert Jenkins, 61 and Mark O’Prey, 44, both from East Kilbride in South Lanarkshire, 33-year-old Colin Gibson of Ayr, South Ayrshire, and John McGarrigle, 57, from Cumbernauld in North Lanarkshire.

A total of nine people died after a police helicopter crashed into the roof of the busy Clutha bar in the city on Friday night.

The confirmation of the last four names completes the formal identification of all those who died in the incident.

Two other victims who were inside the pub had already been named as 48-year-old Gary Arthur, from Paisley, and Samuel McGhee, 56, of Glasgow.

All three of the helicopter’s crew died when the aircraft landed on the popular bar as it returned from a police operation at 10.25pm. They are pilot David Traill, 51, who died along with police officers Kirsty Nelis, 36, and Tony Collins, 43.

Confirmation of the names of all those who died came after officials revealed the search and recovery operation at the crash site has concluded.

The site is subject to an ongoing police investigation but management of the incident scene has been handed over to the city council.

Police Scotland deputy chief constable Rose Fitzpatrick said: “All nine names of those who died in the tragic incident last Friday in Glasgow have now been confirmed. Our thoughts first and foremost are with the families and friends of all those who have died. As our investigation continues we will of course go on providing support to the families involved.

“This has been a difficult and complex operation which has involved painstaking work and the skills of specialist personnel from across the emergency services. I would like to thank all those involved for their professionalism and respect with which they conducted this operation.

“I would also like to thank all those who have passed on their messages of sympathy and support. This continues to be of great comfort.

“The management of the incident has now been handed over to Glasgow City Council. The Police Scotland investigation, led by the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS), and the inquiry by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) both continue.”

The final number of fatalities from the incident stands at nine.

Eleven people remain in hospitals across the city.