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Wingsuit Flyer, a champion who played in the BBC documentary, played the role of “The Boy Who Can Fly” in the BBC documentary after he suffered a serious injury during a jump over the weekend.
Liam Byrne, 24, was reported to have participated in a high-risk jump nearly 8,000 feet above sea level above the Swiss Alps during a tragic attack on Saturday. telegraphciting local police.
Byrne of Scotland Diver gliding in the air.

Wingsuit diver Liam Byrne smiles in action, in collage. He died Saturday. (Instagram @liambyrne0)
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He is one of three wing pilots, and he is from Gitschen Switzerland.
However, Bourne “was shortly after his expected course, the reason was unclear and hit a rock outcrop,” police said. “He suffered fatal injuries.”
Byrne, British Champion According to The Outlet, in the Adrenaline-fueled sports, it is an experienced flyer with over 4,000 jumps in his name. His Instagram account also lists him as a skydiving coach, Wingsuit coach and base (buildings, antennas, Span and Earth) jumper.
In a documentary produced by the BBC, the filmmaker follows Byrne’s journey to the championship flyer.
Byrne told Documentary: “When I told my father that I wanted to learn to fly like a bird, I think I was about 13 years old.”

Byrne is about to jump off, and left, a man shows off his full suit in a man wearing a Tianmen Mountain in Zhangjiajie, China’s Hun Province. (Instagram @liambyrne0; Wang Zhao/AFP via Getty Images.)
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He said the office’s work far outweighed the fear of dying from a base or wingspan. He insisted that good preparation was at the heart of all his jumps and kept him safe and admitted that high-stakes sports worry his family.
Byrne climbed Mount Kilimanjaro at the age of 12, became a licensed skateboarder at the age of 14, completed his first parachuting sport at the age of 16, and flew at the age of 18, according to the BBC.
Byrne’s family issued a statement praising him, saying the sport is “not just Liam’s thrill – that’s freedom. It’s where he is most active.”
The statement read in part: “We want to remember Liam not only because of the way he left the world, but also because of the way he lived.”

Liam Byrne posted on Instagram on her final wingspan. (Instagram @liambyrne0)
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“Liam is fearless, not necessarily because he is not afraid, but because he refuses to let fear stop him. He chases life in a way that most of us only dream and soars.”
The statement continued: “He inspired all of us and made life better with his bold spirit and kind heart. We will miss Liam’s wild energy and the laughter of interest. Although he is now beyond our reach, he will always be with us.”
There are many Wingsuit-related deaths in the United States, including the January 2024 incident, in which 36-year-old Gregory Coates died in Colorado after his primary and backup parachutes Unable to deploy.
Jonathan Bizilia, 27, of Alabama, died in high school in September Utah.