British Columbia

Stranded man with outstanding warrants plucked off cliff amid B.C. wildfire lands in jail

A man stranded on the side of a cliff amid a wildfire near Hope, B.C., was rescued by helicopter and then taken into custody on multiple outstanding warrants, according to RCMP.

27-year-old man rescued by helicopter

A helicopter drops water over a wildfire burning near the Serpent's Back trail near Hope, B.C., on Thursday.
A helicopter drops water over a wildfire burning near the Serpent's Back trail near Hope, B.C., on Thursday. (CBC)

A man stranded on the side of a cliff amid a wildfire near Hope, B.C., was rescued by helicopter and then taken into custody on multiple outstanding warrants, according to RCMP.

Mounties say their officers arrived to help other first responders on Thursday as the fire burned in steep terrain on the side of a mountain, when they heard a man yelling for help. 

Once the fire was contained in the area, police say search and rescue crews found a 27-year-old man stranded on the face of a cliff. 

The man was taken out by a helicopter long line and wasn't hurt, but it turns out there were several warrants out for his arrest, and he was taken into custody.

WATCH | New out-of-control wildfire breaks out near Hope:

New out of control wildfire breaks out near Hope

2 days ago
Duration 2:09
A new wildfire has sparked up near Hope. B.C. Wildfire says it was discovered last night.

The B.C. Wildfire Service said in an update on Friday that the fire was discovered Wednesday near the popular Serpent's Back hiking trail and is now classified as being held.

Brad Fandrich with Valley Helicopters, a charter helicopter operator, says the wildfire service called for help, and he dumped about 100 buckets on the fire on Thursday alone. 

Fandrich says the steep cliffs made it difficult for crews to get close to the blaze, so the fight had to be done by helicopter.

The District of Hope says the B.C. Wildfire Service is supporting its local fire department with air suppression and a 10-person ground crew.

WATCH | Wildfires near Lytton, B.C., prompt evacuation orders, state of local emergency: 

Wildfires near Lytton, B.C., prompt evacuation orders, state of local emergency

2 days ago
Duration 2:10
The B.C. Wildfire Service says the Nikaia fire, one of two blazes burning near Lytton in the Fraser Canyon, is now being held at 5.7 hectares and is unlikely to grow further. A second fire north of Lytton is spread across 100 hectares and is out of control. There are about 80 active fires in BC, mostly in the northeast. CBC’s Shaurya Kshatri reports.

A wildfire near Lytton remains the only wildfire of note burning in the province. 

The Izman Creek fire has grown to 155 hectares in size and is listed as out of control, although an evacuation order issued by the Neskonlith Indian Band for about 40 properties has been downgraded to an alert. 

The Thompson-Nicola Regional District says some properties under its jurisdiction near the fire remain on evacuation alert, just over four years after much of the town of Lytton was destroyed by a wildfire. 

Mounties said this week that the fire was triggered after a wheel fell off an RCMP trailer, which sparked grasses in a ditch. 

The regional district also says that an evacuation alert that had been in place for homes threatened by the Mount Scatchard Wildfire, west of Chase, B.C., has been lifted as of Friday.