Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 deaths in crash of plane

Camden airport scene of accident

- KENNETH HEARD

An airplane that crashed and killed two people at the Camden Municipal Airport on Sunday evening had just taken off and appeared to turn back before hitting the ground and bursting into flames, authoritie­s said.

The plane, a six-seat Beechcraft C35 V-Wing, taxied to the north end of the Harrell Field runway, took off heading south and suddenly made a U-turn as soon as its wheels left the ground, said Capt. Adam LaDuke of the Ouachita County sheriff’s office.

The accident occurred shortly after 6:30 p.m.

Authoritie­s have not released the names of the victims, pending notificati­on of family members.

LaDuke said the plane was headed to Saline County Regional Airport in Bryant but had stopped in Camden to buy fuel because it was cheaper there. It’s a common practice among pilots to do that, LaDuke said.

LaDuke said he didn’t know where the plane flew in from.

Camden Fire Chief Rob Metford said firefighte­rs were called to the airport at 6:52 p.m., and the craft was fully engulfed in flames when they arrived. Firefighte­rs extinguish­ed the blaze with foam and recovered two bodies, he said.

Ouachita County Coroner Sylvester Smith pronounced both of the victims dead at the scene, a sheriff’s office news release said.

Both bodies were burned badly, LaDuke said, and he believed both were men. Authoritie­s sent the bodies to the state Crime Laboratory in Little Rock for identifica­tion.

The airplane is registered to co-owners Rufus F. Brown of Hensley and Michael S. Felcher.

LaDuke said he spoke with Felcher on Monday morning after learning he was not on the plane.

Metford said the plane crashed in grass just to the northeast of the runway. The burned wreckage was confined to a small area, he said, indicating the plane did not explode in the air. Some witnesses told authoritie­s they heard an explosion when the plane crashed.

Willie Jean Kemp said she returned to her home on Carden Street at the northern end of the airport Sunday night and saw the smoldering wreckage of the airplane.

She said a friend who lives by her saw the crash and notified authoritie­s.

“He said it was taking off and just got up when it turned around and tried to land,” Kemp said.

“It took a nose dive and crashed.”

Angie Langley, an employee of Quickie’s Valero on U.S. 79, said she saw smoke on the northern end of the runway. The convenienc­e store is near the airport.

“We assumed it was someone burning diesel off,” she said. “Then we saw the firetrucks.”

Police said the weather was clear at the time of the accident.

Lynn Lunsford, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, said investigat­ors arrived at the crash site Monday morning and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board is in charge of the investigat­ion.

“It’s hard to figure out what happened,” LaDuke said. “It made that hard turn left to come back. You can assume it was mechanical failure, but right now all it is is assumption­s.”

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Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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