Post new topic    Reply to topic
Login to print this topic
Author Message
Grav!ty
Graham Massey
PostPosted: Thu Oct 02, 2008 9:55 pm Reply with quote

Vice President
Operations
 
 


Joined: 14 Sep 2004
Posts: 20770
Location: Johannesburg
Human Remains Found Amid Fossett Wreck

October 2, 2008


Federal investigators say they have found body parts amid the wreckage of a missing adventurer's airplane in the in California's rugged Sierra Nevada just over a year after the he vanished on a solo flight. The craft appears to have hit the mountainside head-on, authorities said Thursday.

The National Transportation Safety Board said that searchers found enough at the crash site of Steve Fossett's plane to provide coroners with DNA.

National Transportation Safety Board acting Chairman Mark Rosenker won't say exactly what searchers found. But he says it was not surprising how little they uncovered, considering how long it had been since the crash.

Most of the plane's fuselage disintegrated on impact, and the engine was found several hundred feet away at an elevation of 9,700 feet, authorities said.

"It was a hard-impact crash, and he would've died instantly," said Jeff Page, emergency management coordinator for Lyon County, Nev., who assisted the search.

Crews conducting an aerial search late Wednesday spotted what turned out to be the wreckage in the Inyo National Forest near the town of Mammoth Lakes, Sheriff John Anderson said. They confirmed around 11 p.m. that the tail number found matched Fossett's single-engine Bellanca plane, he said.

The NTSB would bring in a private contractor to help with recovery of the airplane, Rosenker said. "It will take weeks, perhaps months, to get a better understanding of what happened," he said.

Fossett, 63, disappeared on Sept. 3, 2007, after taking off in a plane he borrowed from a Nevada ranch owned by hotel magnate Barron Hilton. A judge declared Fossett legally dead in February following a search for the famed aviator that covered 20,000 square miles.

Searchers began combing the rugged terrain on Wednesday, two days after a hiker found Fossett's identification. The wreckage was found about a quarter-mile from where hiker Preston Morrow made his discovery Monday.

The IDs provided the first possible clue about Fossett's whereabouts since he vanished.

"I remember the day he crashed, there were large thunderheads over the peaks around us," Mono County Undersheriff Ralph Obenberger said, gesturing to the mountains flanking Mammoth Lakes.

Aviators had previously flown over Mammoth Lakes, about 90 miles south of the ranch, in the search for Fossett, but it had not been considered a likely place to find the plane.

The most intense searching was concentrated north of the town, given what searchers knew about sightings of Fossett's plane, his plans for when he had intended to return and the amount of fuel he had in the plane.

A judge declared Fossett, 63 when he disappeared, legally dead in February following a search for the famed aviator that covered 20,000 square miles.

Sir Richard Branson, one of Fossett's friends, told CBS' The Early Show that he was heartened by the latest developments.

"The good news is that I hope this will put a rest to the stories that have been going around once and for all and give everybody who was close to Steve a chance to pay the right tributes to an absolutely great and extraordinary man," Branson said.

In a statement, Fossett's widow offered thanks to Morrow and searchers on the ground and said she was anxious to learn from investigators the cause and circumstances of the crash.


More at: CBS News
 
Back to top
augie
Algis Koscus
PostPosted: Thu Oct 02, 2008 10:18 pm Reply with quote

Management
Community Discussion
 
 


Joined: 25 Aug 2002
Posts: 17566
Location: Laurentians, Quebec
At least there can be closure now. It's kind of strange that he died on a very low risk flight. What a life eh? smilenod
 
Back to top
Grav!ty
Graham Massey
PostPosted: Thu Oct 02, 2008 11:57 pm Reply with quote

Vice President
Operations
 
 


Joined: 14 Sep 2004
Posts: 20770
Location: Johannesburg
Yeah, I'm glad the muck raking speculations on insurance fraud and other garbage which totally tainted his "life's work" are now put to rest. Still no explanation about how the accident occurred though, or how such an experienced aviator and adventurer "lost it" in what should have been a routine flight for him.

By all accounts that terrain is really tricky and a plane going up some of those canyons can easily run into a dead end...no pun intended. Hey I guess someone like he pushes things to the limit most of the time so that in itself, together with the nature of the terrain is an explanation of what might have happened.
 
Back to top
phileysmiley
Larry Richman
PostPosted: Fri Oct 03, 2008 12:05 am Reply with quote

Management
Media & Events
 
 


Joined: 21 Jun 2004
Posts: 37286
Location: Philadelphia PA USA
I was also relieved, in a way, that this isn't left one of those open mysteries that would be debated forever (is he really dead? is he hiding out somewhere to escape the IRS?). It's a cliche but I guess he died doing what he loves, and with his own destiny in his hands. He was a pioneer and will go down in the annals of great aviators.
 
Back to top
yeshuas
Daniel Schmidt
PostPosted: Fri Oct 03, 2008 9:07 am Reply with quote

Moderator
Support Team
 
 


Joined: 17 Jan 2007
Posts: 3237
Location: Chicago, IL
I was in that area earlier this year, and if there is any lessened visibility, welllllllll
 
Back to top
kanaloa
John C. Derrick
PostPosted: Fri Oct 03, 2008 11:41 am Reply with quote

Founder
 
 


Joined: 09 Mar 2002
Posts: 43414
Location: Columbia, SC
Seems weird it's taken so long to find the plane (only after that hiker discovered some things). I thought all planes has GPS or a locater beacon on them now, so even if they crashed you could locate where they'd landed/crashed.

At least he died doing what he loved - had had one heck of a life. smilenod
 
Back to top
Back to top
Index >> Community Lounge >> Human Remains Found Amid Fossett Wreck

Page 1 of 1

Post new topic   Reply to topic


Tired of the Ads? Registered users have 80% less adverts.