NY National Guard Releases Names of 3 DUSTOFF Aviators Killed in Tragic Helicopter Accident

Chief Warrant Officer Steven Skoda

The New York National Guard released the identities of three service members killed in a helicopter training accident on Friday, a day after their bodies were recovered and transported by police and fire escort from the crash site.

The victims include Chief Warrant Officer Steven Skoda, a 35-year veteran of the Army and the New York Amy National Guard. He first joined the National Guard in 1987 and started to fly UH-1 helicopters from the Army Aviation Support Facility in Rochester when he became a pilot in 1992.

Skoda was also an Afghanistan War veteran who served in 2013 and 2019 and a mentor to soldiers of all ranks throughout his career, the National Guard said. He was 54 years old.

Chief Warrant Officer 4 Christian Koch

Skoda died along with Chief Warrant Officer Christian Koch and Chief Warrant Officer Daniel Prial in the crash Wednesday evening. Koch was a 20-year veteran of the New York Army National Guard and initially served as an infantryman in A Company of the 2nd Battalion, 108th Infantry. A veteran of both the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, Koch was an experienced helicopter pilot and instrument flight instruction. The 39-year-old married father of four also worked as a civilian pilot for the New York State Police, which mourned his loss in a statement Friday. “The New York State Police thank him for his service to his country, and to the people of the State of New York,” the statement said in part.

Chief Warrant Officer Two Daniel Prial

Prial had served in the Army since 2012 after earning a commission at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He served as a medical evacuation platoon leader with the 82nd Airborne Division’s 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade. Prial attained the rank of captain before accepting an appointment as a warrant officer in the New York Army National Guard so he could continue to fly.

He was 30 years old and lived in Rochester. Fellow soldiers described him as extremely humble and family-centric, the National Guard said in a statement.

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