Friday, April 01, 2016

BASE jumper found dead in Metcalf, Thomas County, Georgia

26-year-old Tom Patrick Baker, left, and 46-year-old Miles Edwin Daisher were arrested for trespassing in Thomas County, Georgia this morning. The two were accompanying a friend who died in a BASE jumping accident.
(Photo: Thomas County Sheriff's Office)


A BASE jumper died this morning after jumping off a television tower in Metcalf, Georgia.

The Thomas County Sheriff's Office said 37-year-old Brandon Jackson, a retired U.S. Army master sergeant from Hawaii, was found dead in a wooded area, still attached to his parachute.

TCFO Capt. Steven Jones said deputies were called to a scene off Roddenberry Road about 3:30 a.m. by two men who came to support Jackson. The two men, 26-year-old Tom Patrick Baker of North Carolina and 46-year-old Miles Edwin Daisher of Idaho, stayed on the ground throughout the jump, Jones said.

Baker and Daisher told deputies they searched the area for about an hour before calling deputies. The two said when Jackson jumped they heard the sound of his parachute deploy followed by another sound they didn't recognize. They believe he hit an electrical wire on the way down.

Jackson was found dead in a wooded area about 800 to 1,000 yards north-northwest of the active tower. He came down through the trees, Jones said.

Baker and Daisher were arrested and booked into the Thomas County Jail after they were interviewed by deputies. Both are charged with trespassing.

The acronym BASE, according to basejumper.com, stands for the four launching points used by jumpers: Building, antenna, span and earth.

Original article can be found here:  http://www.tallahassee.com


Professional BASE jumper Miles Daisher does a gainer high over the Snake River Canyon during the 8th annual Perrine Bridge Festival in 2013. Daisher and Tom Patrick Baker were charged with criminal trespass Thursday after a man with them, Brandon Jackson, died while BASE jumping from a phone tower in Metcalf.



METCALF — Brandon Jackson, 37, a retired U.S. Army master sergeant formerly of Michigan and currently of Hawaii, is dead after jumping off a phone tower in Metcalf Thursday morning.

At approximately 2:30 a.m., Jackson and two other men went to the tower off Roddenberry Road near Metcalf.

Thomas County Sheriff's Office Capt. Steve Jones said the trio was there for Jackson to BASE jump off the tower. BASE jumping is parachuting from a fixed structure. The tower is reportedly one of the tallest in Georgia.

Jackson climbed to about 1,600 feet, nearly to the top of the 1,800 to 2,000 foot tower, with a parachute and jumped.

The other men, Miles Edwin Daisher, 47, of Twin Falls, Idaho, and Tom Patrick Baker, 29, of North Carolina, stayed on the ground. According to Jones, the men told investigators they heard the chute open and then another noise they couldn’t identify.

Daisher and Baker searched the area for about an hour, looking for Jackson, according to Jones, before they called authorities. Jones said the Sheriff’s Office received the call around 3:30 a.m.

A massive search involving the Thomas County Sheriff’s Office, Thomas County Emergency Management Services and local residents who provided four-wheelers and manpower ensued. The Leon County Florida Sheriff’s Office used a helicopter to try to find a heat signature, but the effort was unsuccessful. The search began at the tower and expanded outward.

Jackson’s body was found by Metcalf residents Randy and Patti Benton late Thursday morning. He was found approximately 800 to 1,000 yards from the tower, according to Jones, about 20 feet inside of the edge of nearby woods.

Randy Benton said the parachute was in the tree and the deceased man was at the bottom of the tree. Benton went for authorities while his wife stayed with the body.

“That’s certainly not something you see everyday,” Benton said.

“The wind was possibly a factor,” said Jones. “According to the National Weather Service, it was gusting at over 40 mph at that time. The chute did deploy. He may have hit a guide wire.

"We won’t know for sure until the investigation is completed,” he said.

Jones thanked all the responding law enforcement and local residents for their help, calling the search a “fabulous team effort.”

Daisher and Baker were arrested and charged with criminal trespass. Other charges may be pending.

According to Allison Smith with the Twin Falls Times-News and Magicnews.com in Twin Falls, Idaho, Daisher is from Warner Robins, but he’s lived in Twin Falls for quite some time.

She said Daisher is a nationally recognized BASE jumper who brought national attention to BASE jumping and Twin Falls by setting a world record.

The Perrine Bridge near Twin Falls is one of the few places in the country where it is legal to BASE jump year round without a permit.

“In 2005, Miles jumped from the Perrine Bridge 57 times in less than 24 hours, hiking out of the Snake River Canyon each time, approximately the equivalent distance as hiking Mount Everest,” she said.

He is one of the organizers of the Perrine Bridge Festival each September, which raises money for the local hospital foundation. He also runs a business in Twin Falls where he teaches people to pack parachutes, BASE jump, etc.

Original article can be found here: http://www.moultrieobserver.com

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