Lodi News-Sentinel

Deadly Sunday plane crash remains a mystery

- By Matthew Ormseth, Joe Mozingo and Richard Winton

YORBA LINDA — On a blustery Sunday afternoon, a strange wailing caught Susan Bacha’s ear, followed by a thunderous crack. She took the sound to be one of the street’s regular speeding motorcycli­sts finally taking the corner too fast and slamming into a car.

The Super Bowl was less than two hours away, and many of her neighbors on Crestknoll Drive in Orange County were puttering about at home or preparing for a big game party.

Next door, the boom made Marcia Prichard, 83, look up from her newspaper. She figured it was lightning.

Through her window, she saw branches and debris tumbling down from her eucalyptus tree. Strange, she thought, maybe an earthquake. When she and her husband spotted fire in their driveway, he dashed outside fearing his car had exploded.

Instead he found a plane wing engulfed in flames.

A Cessna 414 had broken apart above their Yorba Linda neighborho­od, raining chunks of burning metal over 16 homes on their block. The fuselage had chopped off the top of the Prichards’ eucalyptus and landed on the slope below their house. A propeller came to rest in a neighbor’s driveway. An engine lay on a front porch.

Three lots to the east, fire raged through a home with a giant gash in the middle of it.

The pilot of the Cessna 414 and four people in the fiery home were killed, and two other people were injured. The pilot was identified as Antonio Pastini of Nevada.

The four killed in the home were identified Wednesday by the Orange County coroner as Roy Lee Anderson, 85, of Yorba Linda; his wife, Dahlia Marlies Leber Anderson, 68, of Yorba Linda; Stacie Norene Leber, 48, of Corona; and Donald Paul Elliott, 58, of Norco.

Marcia Prichard’s husband, Paul, had no idea his neighbors were killed as he grabbed his garden hose to put out the flaming wing. The heat was so intense that it scorched his roses a couple of yards away. The smoke and fire up the street turned a light drizzle into a surreal steam.

How close they came to death didn’t hit them until later.

“When we started thinking about it, that’s when it started bothering us,” Paul Prichard said Wednesday.

“We look at that tree,” he said, pointing at the decapitate­d eucalyptus, “and say, ‘Oh my God.’”

Pastini took off from Fullerton Airport around 1:35 p.m. and flew about 10 miles, reaching as high as 7,800 feet, according to the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, when witnesses saw his plane on fire, plummeting through the clouds and leaving a black trail of smoke, authoritie­s said. Moments later, its tail and wings came off.

At one home, an engine alternator torpedoed through a first-floor window, flying through two rooms before landing in a bathroom. Fragments of exhaust pipe crashed through a second-floor window and melted into the carpet.

Neighbors suspect the second wing, carrying a fuel tank, is what erupted in flames at the home where the four people died. It was the one big piece of the plane they didn’t see around the neighborho­od.

Investigat­ors with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the NTSB combed through the wreckage Monday and collected pieces of the aircraft, which were being taken to a Phoenix storage facility. NTSB officials said the investigat­ion could take 18 months.

Tom Anthony, director of the University of Southern California’s Aviation Safety and Security Program, said video of the crash shows the “the aircraft broke up in air.”

“We can see fire and black smoke, and that suggests a lot of fuel,” he said.

Pastini himself is a bit of a mystery.

He was initially identified by California authoritie­s as a retired Chicago police officer. But a spokeswoma­n for the Chicago Police Department said Pastini was never employed by the department and was carrying a Chicago police badge that had been missing since 1978.

Carrie Braun, spokeswoma­n for the Orange County Sheriff ’s Department, said the metal police star recovered from Pastini’s body “appeared to be legitimate.”

It’s unclear how Pastini got the badge.

Braun said Pastini was born Jordan Isaacson and changed his name in the 1970s.

According to records, Pastini once owned a restaurant, Kim Lee’s Japanese Restaurant and Sushi Bar, in Gardnervil­le, Nev., south of Carson City.

A 1997 article about youth programs in the Reno GazetteJou­rnal described Pastini, then-owner of Kim Lee’s, as a retired Chicago police officer who had been, in his own words, on “both sides of the law, as criminal and cop.” He described being born in a melting-pot neighborho­od of Greeks and Italians.

“We got along really well with the Greeks, but we didn’t get along with the Germans,” Pastini told the newspaper. “When we got into a fight, we used our hands and sticks. Now, they use guns and knives.”

At the time, he told the reporter that he was arrested on suspicion of grand theft when he was 14 and added: “I didn’t have a social worker when I got out. We didn’t have the bleeding heart, goody-two-shoes. We were bad kids and we were treated as such. We had discipline in those days.”

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A woman takes a photo Monday of airplane parts that landed on her street as workers remove airplane wreckage after a crash of a Cessna airplane in a Yorba Linda neighborho­od on Sunday.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES A woman takes a photo Monday of airplane parts that landed on her street as workers remove airplane wreckage after a crash of a Cessna airplane in a Yorba Linda neighborho­od on Sunday.

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