Marin Independent Journal

North Dakota lawmaker killed in airplane crash

- By Jack Dura and Trisha Ahmed

A North Dakota lawmaker who had flown to Arizona to be part of his sister's sendoff before she deployed overseas gave the woman a hug and told her to “stay safe.”

Hours later, state Sen. Doug Larsen, his wife, and their two young sons were killed on their way home when the single-engine Piper Cherokee he was flying crashed in Utah on Sunday after a refueling stop.

Peggy Steimel said it was the first time Larsen, of Mandan, and his family had flown the plane to visit her in Scottsdale, Arizona. She said her brother made the trip so he could be part of her sendoff before she deployed for about a year overseas with the Arizona National Guard.

Larsen had been a Black Hawk helicopter pilot in the North Dakota National Guard, and Steimel tearfully recalled their final conversati­on and the advice her older brother gave her.

“He gave me a hug and we said we loved each other — and said, `Stay safe.'”

Larsen, his wife, Amy, and the two boys died later Sunday when his plane crashed shortly after takeoff from a refueling stop at Canyonland­s Airfield near the desert recreation town of Moab, Utah. The senator was piloting the plane, according to the Grand County Sheriff's Office.

Steimel identified the sons as 11-year-old Christian and 8-year-old Everett.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is investigat­ing the crash, with a preliminar­y report expected in two weeks.

Federal Aviation Administra­tion records show that Larsen's Piper PA-28140, popularly known as a “Cherokee,” was built in 1966. Its airworthin­ess certificat­e was renewed in June through 2030, indicating it had passed a safety inspection. The Piper Cherokee family is one of the most widely produced planes in general aviation. Larsen bought it to gain flying experience toward getting his commercial license, close friend Joe Faller said.

Faller, who served with Larsen in the Guard, was best man at Doug and Amy's wedding and a godparent to Christian. He said Larsen flew him from Minnesota to Bismarck, North Dakota, in his plane last month.

“For the three hours that we were on the plane, that's all he talked about,” Faller said. “He told me all the things about the plane: exactly how this works, where we were at. He had a passion for that.”

The weather at the time of the crash was mild, with scattered light showers, wide visibility and gentle winds in the area around the airport, according to the National Weather Service. Aerial video posted by KSL-TV of Salt Lake City, Utah, showed the plane went down in a desert area devoid of vegetation, and sustained extensive damage to the nose area and right wing. It came to rest upright.

“He was so careful. When I flew with him, he would check everything before he'd take off. He was very, very serious about that,” said Danielle Hilzendege­r, another one of Larsen's sisters.

Steimel said that during the extended family's weekend together, they did a family photo shoot, ate pizza from a local restaurant, swam in the pool in her backyard, listened to music by Jimmy Buffet, and played baseball together.

Steimel also said her mom joked that they should prepare a “last meal” of Steimel's favorite foods before she deployed. So they had a Midwestern­style family dinner with ham, hash brown casserole, broccoli salad and pumpkin pie.

“When I tell you that we had the best weekend together as a family, it truly was — we had so much fun together. We thought we were preparing to say goodbye to me … not Doug, Amy and the boys,” Steimel said in a follow-up message.

Larsen flew Black Hawk helicopter­s as part of his 29 years of service with the North Dakota Army National Guard, according to Republican state Sens. Jim Roers, a longtime licensed pilot, and Mike Wobbema, a retired military aviator.

A Guard spokesman said Larsen had logged about 1,776 total military flight hours.

 ?? SAMANTHA BRAMMER — SAMANTHA ROSE PHOTOGRAPH­Y LLC VIA AP ?? North Dakota Sen. Doug Larsen, second from left, with his wife, Amy, and their two sons, Christian and Everett, on Saturday at Papago Park in Phoenix, Ariz. All four of them died the following day in a plane crash near Moab, Utah.
SAMANTHA BRAMMER — SAMANTHA ROSE PHOTOGRAPH­Y LLC VIA AP North Dakota Sen. Doug Larsen, second from left, with his wife, Amy, and their two sons, Christian and Everett, on Saturday at Papago Park in Phoenix, Ariz. All four of them died the following day in a plane crash near Moab, Utah.

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