Judge Awards Family $17.8 Million For Marine Jet Crash That Killed Four In San Diego Home

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Posted on 29th December 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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The survivors of four family members who were killed when a Marine Corps jet slammed into their home in San Diego were awarded $17.8 million by a judge Wednesday, according to The Los Angeles Times.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/us-to-pay-178-million-to-family-killed-in-military-jet-crash.html

In California U.S. Disrict Court Judge Jeffrey Miller granted the award stemming from the Dec. 8, 2008, crash of an F/A-18D Hornet, which hit and demolished the home of the Yoon family, The Times reported. The Marine Corps did admit responsibility for the tragic crash in a residential neighborhood, according to the newspaper.

The judge made his award after hearing three days of testimony from Yoon family members and evidence from government lawyers.

Don Yoon’s wife, mother-in-law and two daughters — ages 15 months and seven weeks — where killed as a result of the plane crash. He was not home at the time of the accident.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/trial-begins-to-determine-compensation-for-marine-aircraft-crash.html

The  Marines said the accident happened because of mechanical failures and mistakes by the pilot and other military personnel, according to The Times. The military said that the pilot got inaccurate instructions from officers on the ground and opted not to try land at North Island Naval Air Station.

The pilot had been attempting to land at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station, which is roughly a dozen miles from North Island, according to The Times.  He was doing a training flight from aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln. 

The newspaper reported that the pilot ejected and survived. Following a Marine investigation, he was initially grounded but was later returned to flying status. But four officers were relieved of duty, and eight other Marines and a sailor were reprimanded, The Times reported. 

    

New Jersey Plane Crash Kills Five People, Including A Family and Its Dog

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Posted on 21st December 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Holiday season airplane crashes have destroyed at least two families this year. It has not been a very merry time.

Last month at Thanksgiving a pilot, his three children, and an aircraft mechanic died when their plane crashed into the Superstition Mountains not far from Scottdale, Ariz. 

And on Tuesday morning five people –  including a married couple, their two children and their dog — were killed in an accident in Morris Township, N.J., when their plane crashed on a busy highway, Route 287. The aircraft barely missed hitting a pickup truck when it nosedived near the highway, bursting into flames.

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/12/nj_plane_crash.html

The anguish that the survivors of both these families must be feeling, in what should be a jolly time of the year, must be unimaginable.

The New Jersey accident took the lives of Jeffrey Buckalew and his wife Corinne, both 45, their son Jackson, 11, their daughter Meriweather, 9, and their pet dog, according to The Star-Ledger of Newark. Buckalew’s colleague at an investment banking firm in Manhattan, Rakesh Chawla, 36, also perished.

Buckalew was the pilot of the plane, and had his pilot’s license for about a decade, according to The Wall Street Journal.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204791104577110493871800040.html

 Investigators for the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) ended their recovery efforts about 6 p.m. Tuesday at nightfall, noting that the effort was going moving along slower than expected because of the heavy traffic on busy Route 287, according to The Ledger. Parts of the plane, a Socata TBM-700m were strewn on the hghway. 

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/12/5_killed_in_plane_crash_in_mor.html

The plane had taken off from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey and was en route to DeKalb-Peachtree Airport in Atlanta. The crash, whose cause is under investigation, happened just 15 minutes after the plane’s takeoff, The Ledger reported.

Buckalew had discussed ‘icy conditions with air traffic control shortly after takeoff. He and his family were going to spend the holidays with his inlaws.

Both he and Chawla were managing directors at Greenhill & Co. 

 

Pilot Dies, But Passenger Lives, After Plane Crash In Scottsdale

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Posted on 16th December 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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A pilot was killed, but his passenger survived, a plane crash just a half-mile from Scottsdale Airport in Arizona Thursday morning,  according to The Arizona Republic.

http://www.azcentral.com/community/nephoenix/articles/2011/12/15/20111215plane-crashes-phoenix-neighborhood-near-scottsdale-airport.html

The Cirrus SR22 was about to land when it went down in a residential area, on Joan De Arc Avenue not far from 70th Street at 10 a.m., The Republic reported. Authorities haven’t revealed the names of the two men who were on the single-engine plane.

But the pilot was a 62-year-old man, and he was found dead inside the aircraft. His 60-year-old passenger, miraculously, was taken to a trauma center but apparently didn’t have life-threatening wounds from the accident, according to The Republic.

The paper reported that the aircraft was registered to Frank M. Smith and Associates of Pinetop, Ariz., and was enroute from Show Low to Scottsdale.

The accident is being probed by the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board.

Residents of Scottsdale and Phoenix who live near the airport used the crash to once again voice their concern about planes landing and taking off there, Th Republic reported. Last year the airport agreed to allow jets take off with as much as 100,000 pounds of fuel, compared to a previous limit of 75,000 pounds.       

One Of The Three Victims Of An Illinois Air Ambulance Crash Died Of Heart Attack

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Posted on 2nd December 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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One of the three people killed in an air ambulance crash in the Chicago area Monday died of a heart attack, not injuries from the crash, The Chicago Tribune reported Thursday.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-autopsy-finds-patient-on-plane-died-of-heart-attack-not-crash-20111201,0,2795634.story

An autopsy found that John Bialek’s cause of death was coronary artherosclerosis, hardening of the arteries to his heart, as well as stress from the accident, The Tribune reported.

Bialek, 80, was a patient being transported on an air ambulance from West Palm Beach, Fla., to the Chicago area when the twin-engine aircraft crashed in Riverwoods, a suburb. 

He died, as did his wife Ilomae, 75, and William Didier, the 58-year-old  pilot from Cedar Grove, Wis., according to The Tribune. Two people survived the crash. 

Before the crash, someone on the plane told air traffic contol that they had run out of fuel.  

The accident is being investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board. 

Bialek was being transported to Illinois to get medical treatment for a blood infection, according to The Tribune. 

Investigators Search For Answers In Arizona Plane Crash That Killed Six

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Posted on 26th November 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Federal safety investigators are combing the scene of a plane crash on an Arizona cliff to find clues to determine what happened, according to The Arizona Republic.

http://www.azcentral.com/community/pinal/articles/2011/11/25/20111125arizona-superstition-mountains-plane-crash-answers.html

The National Safety Transportation Board is collecting scattered wreckage from the plane, which slammed into a cliff in the Superstition Mountains not far from Phoenix, killing six people the night before Thanksgiving. The victims included a father and his three children.

The crash site can only be accessed by chopper or rappellers’ ropes, according to The Republic.

The accident involving a twin-engine Rockwell Aero Commander 690 killed: Shawn Perry, 39, and his three children; Russel Hardy, 31; and Joseph Hardwick, 22, an aircraft mechanic.

Both Perry and Hardy were pilots, and investigators are trying to determine who was flying the plane when it crashed, The Republic reported. The small plane slammed into a cliff just give minutes after its takeoff, missing the top of  it by only 150 to 200 feet, according to the newspaper.

Hardy owned Ponderosa Aviation Inc. in Safford, Ariz., and had just purchased the plane that crashed. The plane was transported from Indiana to Arizona on Nov. 16.

According to The Republic, whoever was piloting the plane, Hardy or Perry, was flying under visual flight rules. That means that he had to see and veer away from the mountain on his own, without any help from air-traffic control.

Perry had flown to Mesa from Safford to pick up his children Morgan, 9, Logan, 8, and Luke, 6, to bring them to his place for Thanksgiving. 

He was divorced from their mother Karen Perry, who is also a pilot.       

Oklahoma State Coaches Among Four Killed In Arkansas Plane Crash

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Posted on 19th November 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Two Oklahoma State women’s basketball coaches were among four people killed when a plane crashed in Arkansas Thursday night.

http://news.okstate.edu/press-releases/1321-osu-coach-kurt-budke-assistant-coach-miranda-serna-killed-in-plane-crash

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/19/sports/ncaabasketball/oklahoma-state-coaches-die-in-plane-crash.html?ref=sports

The head coach, Kurt Budke, 50, and assistant coach Miranda Serna, 36, were on a recruiting trip when the accident happened.

The pilot, former Arkansas state Sen. Olin Branstetter, 82, and his wife Paula were also killed in the crash, which took place about 45 miles from Little Rock, according to The New York Times. They were both OSU alums and school supporters, according to a statement from the school.

The four were flying in a single-engine Piper, and the cause of the accident hasn’t been determined. The Times pointed out that Thursday’s crash happened 10 years after a tragic plane crash that killed two Oklahoma State men’s basketball players and eight other people near Denver. The players were coming home from a game at the University of Colorado at Boulder when the accident took place on Jan. 27, 2001.

Oklahoma State will hold a memorial service on Monday at 1 p.m. to honor the lives of  Budke, Serna and the Branstetters. 

Monday classes held between 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. are being canceled in order for the university community to attend the memorial service.

 The Times credited Budke with transforming “women’s basketball at O.S.A. from an afterthought in the poweerful Big 12 Conference in6o a program that reachd the N.C.A.A. tournament in three of the past five years.”   

“The Oklahoma State family is devastated by this tragedy,” OSU President Burns Hargis said in a prepared statement.  “Our hearts and prayers go out to the families of Kurt Budke, Miranda Serna and the other victims. Kurt was an exemplary leader and a man of character who had profound impact on his student-athletes,”

Hargis said,  “He was an outstanding coach and a wonderful person. We send our deepest sympathies to his wife, Shelley, and their children, Sara, Alex and Brett. Coach Budke elevated our women’s basketball program to new levels of success. He and his staff raised our profile in the nation’s toughest conference.” 
 
As for Serna, Hargis said, “Miranda was an up-and-coming coach and an outstanding role model for our young ladies.”

Of the Branstetters, Hargis said, ”We also extend our thoughts and prayers to the Branstetter family, which has a long legacy of support to OSU.” 

Jim Littell, associate head coach, would assume duties as interim head coach. The university announced the Cowgirls will not play games scheduled for today and Sunday. OSU counselors and athletic staff are offering assistance to the Cowgirl student-athletes and staff.
 

Three Killed When Passenger Jet Explodes In Siberia

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Posted on 2nd January 2011 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Three people were killed and dozens injured when a Russian jet caught fire and exploded when it taxied on a snowy runway in Siberia, according to the Associated Press.

http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/01/russian-passenger-jet-explodes-1-dead-10-injured/?icid=maing%7Cmain5%7Cdl1%7Csec1_lnk3%7C34066

The accident took place Saturday, and involved a passenger jet that was carrying 124 people. In addition to the three dead, 43 people were injured, with six of them seriously burned, AP reported.

A fire started in one of the plane’s engines as it began its takeoff, and that fire caused an explosion that decimated the Tu-154 jet. The flames from the explosion covered an area that was 11,000 square feet.

Most of the passengers and crew were evacuated before the plane exploded, leaving only a tail section and part of its wing left after the fireball.

The jet, owned by the regional Kogalymavia airline, was flying to Moscow from Surgut, a town in Siberia.

The plane’s passengers included the Russian pop group Na-Na, which was popular in the 1990s.     

ER Doctor Dies In Plane Crash While Commuting To Work

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Posted on 27th December 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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An emergency room doctor from Bergen County, N.J., was killed Wednesday when his plane crashed while he was commuting to a hospital in Upstate New York.

 http://www.the-leader.com/news/x1651495111/Officials-N-J-pilot-died-of-injuries

Dr. Michael Lippe of Mahwah, N.J., an experienced pilot, was apparently alive after his single engine plane crashed in Barrington, N.Y., but he died of massive head trauma sustained during the accident, according to press reports.

Lippe had taken off from Essex County Airport in Fairfield, N.J., at roughly 6:40 p.m., en route to Finger Lakes Health hospital in Geneva, N.Y. His plane crashed at 7:50 p.m. when he hit some treetops while flying through sleet and freezing rain. 

Wyoming Plane Crash Kills Four Family Members

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Posted on 3rd November 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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The bodies of four family members have been recovered from the wreckage of a small plane that crashed a week ago in a Wyoming mountain range, according to the Associated Press.   

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jss3k1zjRLhwUpbgpWoqsXf18vmA?docId=d6c574825b6c48cd91be5285cbe0c451

A search team found the single-engine Mooney 20J Monday in Lander, Wyo., in the Wind River range. The plane had left Jackston Hole Airport Oct. 25 during a snowstorm.

The plane was owned by Luke Bucklin, 40, who was piloting the aircraft. He was killed, as were his twins  Nick and Nate, 14, and Noah, 12, according to AP.

Bucklin was president and a co-founder of Sierra Bravo Corp. in Bloomington, Minn. He and his family came to Wyoming for a wedding, and Bucklin’s wife and youngest son had taken a commercial flight home.

 

Plane Crash On Long Island Kills Passenger, Injures Three Others

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Posted on 18th October 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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One passenger was killed Sunday, and three other seriously hurt, when a small plane crashed on a street in Long Island, N.Y., according to The Wall Street Journal.

The single-engine plane was apparently attempting an emergency landing at 9 a.m. Sunday after engine failure, and came down on East Carmans Road in East Farmingdale. The Federal Aviation Administration was investigating the fatal accident.

The propeller plane, a 1969 Marchetti, had taken off from Republic Airport and was circling back for a practice landing coming, and was less than a mile from the runway, when its engine failed. The plane hit a tree, a fence and four parked cars before it crashed.

The four men in the plane were friends who on Sundays would fly to a cafe in a Dutchess County airport for brunch. 

Ed Cerverizzo, 75, was pronounced dead at St. Joseph Hospital in Massapequa, N.Y. Pilot Gus Halouvas, 55, was sent to Nassau University Medical Center with spinal injuries. William Mancuso, 83, was treated for facial cuts at that facility. 

Charles Bianculli, 61, was in critical condition in Good Samaritan Hospital Medical Center.  

 

 

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304772804575558611692117590.html?mod=WSJ_NY_LEFTTopStories