fishing spot on a river.
But something went terribly wrong.
A
floatplane crashed near a picturesque lake in rural southwest Alaska,
killing three lodge clients from California and Pennsylvania and
injuring all seven other people on board, some critically, authorities
said.
The De Havilland DHC-3
Turbine Otter was taking off to head to a remote fishing spot in a river
when it went down outside the tiny town of liamna, 175 miles southwest
of Anchorage, National Transportation Safety Board Alaska Chief Clint
Johnson said.
The aircraft belonged to an Iliamna fishing lodge. It ended up in some trees near Eastwind Lake, a mile north of town.
Alaska
State Troopers identified the dead as Tony W. Degroot, 80, of Hanford,
California; Dr. James P. Fletcher, 70, of Clovis, California; and James
Specter, 69, of Shavertown, Pennsylvania. Their bodies were recovered
and were being sent for an autopsy by the state medical examiner's
office, troopers said.
Fletcher was a retired periodontist, close family friend Meagan Grossman said.
"Jim,
a quiet man with an incredibly generous heart, was full of faith in
Christ Jesus. His family and his church community are grieving
together," the family said in a statement released through Grossman. A
service for him will be held at First Presbyterian Church in Fresno,
California.
Some of the seven injured were critically hurt, while two sustained minor injuries, Johnson said. Their names were not released.
Fletcher, Degroot and Specter were staying as clients at the Rainbow King Lodge, which owned the plane, Johnson said. Calls to the business went unanswered.
Johnson said two NTSB investigators were heading to Iliamna on Tuesday, with one arriving mid-afternoon. He noted it was "way too early for any speculation" on what caused the crash.
The picturesque Eastwind Lake is fairly small and regularly used for floatplane traffic, said Diana Armstrong, who works at a local trading post.
In late June, another DHC-3 Otter crashed in a mountainous area in southeast Alaska, killing all nine people on board.
The
sightseeing plane crashed on a steep cliff about 25 miles from
Ketchikan, killing the pilot and eight cruise ship passengers. The
excursion was sold through the cruise company Holland America and
operated by Ketchikan-based Promech Air.
Another Otter was involved in an August 2010 crash in Alaska that killed former U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens and four others.
Tuesday's
crash was the ninth fatal plane crash in Alaska this year, Federal
Aviation Administration spokesman Allen Kenitzer said. Altogether, there
were 20 deaths among those crashes, he said.
Source: AP
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