Four Americans Among 14 Dead In Plane Crash In Nepal

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Posted on 24th August 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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A plane taking passengers to a popular hiking area in Nepal crashed in bad weather Tuesday, killing 14 people, according to The Los Angeles Times.  

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-nepal-plane-crash-20100825,0,372610.story

There were four Americans, a British citizen and a Japanese person among the dead when the 15-seat Dornier 228 twin turboprop had the accident. It was on its way from Katmandu to Lukla, a town that’s popular with hikers.

Shortly after the plane, operated by Agni Air, took off air traffic control advised it to turn around because of thick cloud cover, according to The Times. The pilot did try to come back to Katmandu, but it was also enshrouded by clouds. So the plane then headed to Simra airport.

Before it made it there, the plane crashed in Shikharpur. There were 11 passengers and three crew members on the flight.

A five-member committee of Nepal’s Civil Aviation Authority will investigate the accident and file a report within 65 days, The Times reported.         

Commercial Jet Hits Violent Turbulence Over Nebraska, With 30 Injured, One Critically

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Posted on 21st July 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Thirty people were injured, one critically, when a United Airlines jet hit severe turbulence over Kansas Tuesday night,  according to the Federal Aviation Administration, throwing passengers around like dolls.

 http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/dozens-injured-as-united-flight-967-hits-severe-turbulence-diverted-to-denver/19562537

The flight was diverted to Denver International Airport, where it landed safely at 7:45 p.m., the FAA said. Flight 967 had originated at Dulles International Airport in Washington, and was bound for Los Angeles.

Twenty six passengers and four crew members were hurt, with one person suffering critical injuries. The injured, who were taken to local Denver hospitals, were treated for whiplash, bruises, strains and sprains, according to a report by AOL.

The Boeing 777 was flying over Kansas, at about 34,000-feet altitude, when it encountered the severe turbulence. Passengers said the plane suddenly jerked up and down violently.

One passenger told The Denver Post that the woman in the seat next to her hit her head on the side of the cabin so hard that she left a crack above the window. And a woman on the other side of the aisle flew up and hit the plane’s ceiling.

The plane had been carrying 255 passengers and 10 crew members.

 

Judge Allows Lawsuit Stemming From Yankee Cory Lidle’s Fatal Plane Crash To Proceed

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Posted on 7th July 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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 A judge ruled Tuesday that the widow of New York Yankee pitcher Cory Lidle, who was killed when a small plane he  was in crashed into a Manhattan building, can proceed with a lawsuit stemming from his death, according to the New York Post.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/lidle_crash_suit_flies_on_uDLKvNiDHnIKKQYY56ioHK

Melanie Lidle has filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against aircraft manufacturer Cirrus Design Corp. The suit alleges that a defective control system lead to the crash, in which the plane carrying the Yankee and flight instructor Tyler Stanger hit an apartment building on the Upper East Side.

The widow Lidle’s attorney had presented testimony from five experts, and Manhattan federal judge Barbara Jones found that based on their evidence there was sufficient cause for the litigation to proceed. 

 Right before the accident Lidle and Stanger were flying over the East River in Manhattan. Then they tried to make a U-turn, and hit the building while doing so. 

The National Transportation Safety Board found that the pair had started their turn too late to have enough room to successfully make the turn.     

  

 

Eight Killed In Plane Crashes In Arizona, Arkansas

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Posted on 14th June 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Eight people were killed, four each in two separate plane crashes, this weekend in Arizona and Arkansas.

In the first fatal accident, a small plane hit an empty high school building in Eagar, Ariz., last Friday. The single engine Piper was going to the Grand Canyon and had just taken off from the Springville, Ariz., airport.    

 http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2010/06/13/20100613eager-arizona-plane-crash-investigation.html

Authorities found the bodies of four people in the crash wreckage, and they were taken to the Apache County medical examiner’s office. 

The plane had circled above Eagar several times before suddenly nosediving into the Round Valley High School at about 2 p.m. The school was empty because classes are over for the summer.

The second plane crash took place Sunday morning near Umpire, Ark., which is in the southwest part of the state and roughly 90 miles from Texarkana.

 http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jwRpoQ2LuspfgVuu5u8HoFpcT8egD9GAM53G1

A single-engine plane carrying four people had taken off from DeQueen and was on its way to an airport in north Arkansas or southern Missouri. It crashed in a remote part of the Howard County Wildlife Management Area at about 9:30 a.m.   

Four Survive Plane Crash In Ulster County, N.Y.

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Posted on 23rd May 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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A pilot and his three passengers survived a frightening crash last Thursday night in Wallkill, N.Y., according to the New York Post.  

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/god_was_co_pilot_muzKsCsFfzstgMcQuiC1NK

The four people were in a Cessna 172N when the aircraft lost power after it took off. The plane then lost altitude and crashed into the front lawn of a house in Ulster County, N.Y.

The plane was being flown by Robert Schmidt, 48, of Bay Shore, Long Island. Two of his passengers were stuck in the plane and had to be set free by rescuers.

Schmidt and passenger John Brienza were airlifted to Westchester Medical Center for treatment. Then Robert Kroll, 42, and Anrhiny Errera, 31, got medical treatment at St. Francis in Poughkeepsie.

 

  

 

 

Indonesian Plane Crashes, Breaks In Two

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Posted on 13th April 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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 An Indonesia plane with more than 100 passengers ran off a  runway when it landed and broke in half Tuesday, finding stopping near a river. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36453582/ns/world_news-asiapacific/?GT1=43001

 Roughly 20 passengers and one Merpati Nusantara Airlines crew member were injured in the crash in Papua. That area, nearly 2,000 miles east of Indonesia’s capital Jakarta, is isolated and undeveloped.

 The accident may have been caused by rainy conditions, leading to the crash of the Merpati Boeing 737-300.

 

Jury Grants $89 Million Award In 1999 Ohio Plane Crash That Killed Four

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Posted on 8th April 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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A jury has awarded families of four passengers killed in a Youngstown, Ohio, plane crash and a survivor $89 million, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer. http://www.philly.com/philly/business/homepage/20100407_Phila__jury_awards__89_million_in_plane_crash.html

 The jury in the Philadelphia Common Please Court Tuesday found that the manufacturer of the six-seat Piper Cherokee’s engine had hidden information about the plane’s defective carburetor. The manufacturer is Lycoming Engines of Williamsport, Pa.

 In the 1999 accident the plane crashed not long after its takeoff, after it made a refueling pit stop.

 The victims who died in the crash were Lendon Pridgen, 53; his stepson Anthony Cipparone, 15, both of Collegeville; Kenneth Tubman, 47, of Lower Providence; and Daniel Diggen, 56, of Chester, Md.

 The sole survivor, 15-year-old Tyler Johnson, sustained serious injuries.

 Pridgen and Tubman were friends, and both chemists at SmithKline Beecham. Tubman’s family never sued over the fatal crash.

 The verdict from the 11-person jury followed a two week trial. The panel granted $64 million in punitive damages and $25 million in compensatory damages.

Neurosurgeon Pilot and His Passenger Killed in Crash of Vintage Plane

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Posted on 9th March 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Federal authorities are investigating the crash of a World War II era plane into the Gulf of Mexico off Florida, killing a neurosurgeon pilot and his passenger. http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/wwii-era-plane-crashes-off-florida-coast-killing-2/19386616?icid=main|main|dl1|link4|http%3A%2F%2Fwww.aolnews.com%2Fnation%2Farticle%2Fwwii-era-plane-crashes-off-florida-coast-killing-2%2F19386616

Dr. Evan Zeiger Jr., 60, was flying a single engine T-6 Texan trainer plane as part of a formation with other aircraft when he crashed into the water at about 12:30 p.m. Saturday. http://www.newsherald.com/news/rosa-82016-beach-santa.html

Zeiger is from Birmingham, Ala., and it’s believed that his passenger was his wife. They would vacation in Florida, in the area of the crash, which took place off South Walton County.

Witnesses said that Zeiger’s plane was dive bombing down toward the water, but then it didn’t pull up. It hit the water at a very high speed, creating a plume of water. No one saw any smoke or flames coming from the aircraft before it crashed.

The National Transportation Safety Board is probing the crash, and the plane’s wreckage was slated to be pulled from the water Monday.

Missing plane’s pilot had only student license

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Posted on 17th December 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 12/17/2008

By DANICA COTO
Associated Press Writer

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The pilot of a plane that disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle with 11 passengers aboard had only a U.S. student pilot license and should have never been allowed to fly, Dominican authorities said Wednesday.

Adriano Jimenez had been stripped of his Dominican license in 2006 because he was caught flying multiengine planes when he was only authorized to fly helicopters, said Pedro Dominguez, president of the Dominican Pilots Association. Two weeks ago, he had a minor accident while landing a small plane at a Dominican airport.

“An in-depth investigation was never opened to prevent what today we are lamenting,” Dominguez said.

Jimenez loaded 11 passengers onto a twin-engine plane in Santiago, Dominican Republic, on Monday and filed a flight plan for a landing in Mayaguana Island in the Bahamas, but he never arrived, according to the Dominican Civil Aviation Institute.

Jimenez sent an emergency signal about 35 minutes after takeoff and then disappeared from the radar. He was flying in low visibility over rough seas, according to U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Barry Bena.

U.S. Coast Guard crews suspended their search Wednesday night after scouring about 5,300 sq. miles (13,727 sq. kilometers) without turning up any sign of the plane or its passengers, said Guard spokesman Lt. Matt Moorlag in Miami.

The plane went missing in the Bermuda Triangle, a zone of the Atlantic Ocean noted for a supposedly high number of unexplained losses of small boats and aircraft.

The U.S. Coast Guard says the mysteries can usually be attributed to storms that flare up quickly and to swift, Gulf Stream currents that wash away evidence of wreckage.

“Overall, the U.S. Coast Guard is not impressed with supernatural explanations of disasters at sea,” Moorlag said.

The missing aircraft’s owner, Luis Perez of Puerto Rico, said he hired a pilot to fly the BN2A MK III Trislander to the Dominican Republic so that Jimenez, a potential buyer, could inspect it.

The pilot who was supposed to fly the plane with Jimenez at his side refused to do so when Jimenez arrived at the airport with 11 passengers, according to Luis Irizarry, an attorney for Perez’ company. He said Jimenez then took the plane himself without authorization.

Jimenez, 43, received a U.S. student pilot license in March, according to U.S. Federal Aviation Administration records.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

US investigator leads plane crash probe

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Posted on 5th December 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 12/5/2008

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A U.S. investigator is studying the charred wreckage of a small plane that plowed into a Puerto Rican rainforest to pinpoint the cause of the deadly crash.

The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board says Todd Gunther is leading the probe.

The Rockwell International 690B plane slammed into El Yunque mountain on Wednesday, killing Caribbean pilot Ken Webster and two U.S. tourists on board.

A spokesman for the Medical Mutual of Ohio health insurance company is identifying the two Americans as Kent W. Clapp, the firm’s chief executive, and his fiancee, Tracy Turner. Puerto Rican officials previously had identified the man as Ken Clapp.

The couple from Avon Lake outside Cleveland chartered the plane from the British Virgin Islands.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.