Among those on the missing plane were two residents of the
Netherlands, one a student pilot and the other an instructor for Dutch airline
KLM, which contracted with the school for pilot training.
The single-engine Piper PA-28 left Falcon Field in the Phoenix
suburb of Mesa on Thursday for a round-trip flight to Winslow, Ariz., with a
stop in Payson. Officials with CAE Global Academy reported it overdue after
several hours.
The Civil Air Patrol launched planes and used radar tracks
and the passengers' cell phone signals to narrow the search area on Friday. The
wreckage was found in a box canyon early Saturday by a state police helicopter
crew.
The plane apparently hit a cliff wall, Federal Aviation
Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said. A search-and-rescue team from the
Gila County sheriff's office hiked to the site and determined there were no
survivors.
The flight instructor on the missing plane was from the
Phoenix area. He was identified as 25-year-old Taylor Bennell, said Nathalie
Bourque, vice president of communications for CAE Inc., which runs flight
schools around the world.
The student pilot was Lucas Westenberg, 19, from the
Netherlands.
The third person on the plane was Rob Van Den
Heuvel, a 68-year-old retired KLM flight officer and former Dutch air force
fighter pilot who was helping train KLM cadets in Arizona.
CAE's Arizona operations train classes of KLM cadets for 21
weeks and then students return to the Netherlands for more training. Training was suspended in the aftermath of the crash.
Commentaar
De verongelukte Lucas Westenberg (foto), zoon van een verkeersvlieger, behaalde vorig jaar zijn vwo-diploma.
Aan boord waren t w e e instructeurs.
Het ongeluk is mogelijk veroorzaakt door een valwind. ('windshear')
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten