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Two Cessna collide over California.

PostPosted: Mon Jan 21, 2008 10:55 am
by Willit Run
Sad news in California!!

'Bodies falling out of sky' in plane crash

Monday, January 21, 2008


Investigators picked through the gnarled wreckage Monday of two small planes that collided about a mile from an airport, killing five and raining debris and bodies down on car dealership parking lots.

The two small Cessnas crashed at 3:35 p.m. Sunday near the small Corona Municipal Airport, just north of the Riverside Freeway, authorities said.

Two people were killed from each plane, and a fifth was killed inside a Chevy dealership hit by wreckage, said Wayne Pollack of the National Transportation Safety Board.

"There were bodies falling out of the sky," eyewitness Hector Hernandez told KCBS-TV. "One of them crashed into the top of a Ford Mustang, and another one fell not too far behind that one on the parking lot."

NTSB investigators had yet to cut all the way through the wreckage of one of the planes, and were unsure about the number of passengers.

"Until we open that aircraft up we cannot be certain how many people were on board," Pollack said.

The smashed fuselage of one of the planes landed atop a parked car. A wing from one of the planes sat in a parking lot. The debris was contained mostly within a 300-yard radius, said Pollack, although some pieces were found as far as 1,000 yards away.

"The smaller aircraft ... just disintegrated into pieces, maybe fifty pieces coming down," eyewitness Jeff Hardin told KABC-TV. "The other aircraft pretty much stayed intact and started spiraling down and came down right behind the Nissan dealer."

One of the planes, a Cessna 172, is registered to William A. Reinke of La Habra, Calif, according to aircraft databases. Reached at his home Sunday night, Reinke declined to say who was flying his plane or who might have been on board.

"I only know what happened off the television," he said.

Pollack said investigators had not yet obtained a flight plan.

The other plane, a smaller Cessna 150, is registered to Air Corona, Inc., based in Dover, Del.

Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Allen Kenitzer did not immediately know where either plane was headed or whether there were any distress calls. The Corona airport does not have a staffed control tower, he said.

Before Sunday, there had been five fatal plane crashes in Corona in the past decade, killing 10 people, according to an NTSB database.

Re: Two Cessna collide over California.

PostPosted: Mon Jan 21, 2008 11:06 am
by BFMF
Saw this on the news. Very sad...

Re: Two Cessna collide over California.

PostPosted: Mon Jan 21, 2008 5:17 pm
by Imsuck
They don't even put these on the news in Toronto >:( Anyways, sad news indeed.

Re: Two Cessna collide over California.

PostPosted: Mon Jan 21, 2008 9:15 pm
by Splinter562
I did some investigating using the wonders of the modern internet. The crash site is underneath a victor airway and about 10 NM from a VOR so the potential is there for the collision to have happened as the two aircraft merged towards the VOR on the airway. This is less likely however than the alternative. The crash site is also near Corona Muni. Airport. It is about 1 mile south, abeam the numbers for runway 7. Runway 7 is a right had pattern and 25 is a left hand pattern, so both traffic patterns are on the south side. This was more likely than not a collision in the pattern between the two aircraft. My best guess is that one was in the pattern and the other merging on the 45 or that both were using opposing runways and had a head-on.

Either way it is a sad story, and a stern warning to all pilots about the need for vigilance at all times in the pattern.

Re: Two Cessna collide over California.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 22, 2008 12:06 am
by beaky
Ghastly... and according to what I've heard from area pilots, almost inevitable.  

I flew over Corona in the Champ on my way to nearby Chino... there was quite a lot of traffic below; the airport sits at a sort of "gateway" point at the north end of a big valley.

Hard to believe, until you see something like this, that some of the most hazardous flying you can do is a carefree jaunt on a fine day!