Texarkana Gazette

7 die in plane crash while returning from Final Four

- By Alexandra Chachkevit­ch and Patrick M. O’Connell

CHICAGO—Two members of Illinois State University’s athletic department were among the seven people killed when their small plane crashed near the airport in Bloomingto­n, Ill., while returning from the NCAA basketball championsh­ip game in Indianapol­is, authoritie­s said.

They were identified as Aaron Leetch, deputy director of athletics for external operations, and Torrey Ward, associate head coach of the Redbirds men’s basketball team.

“The entire campus (is) in mourning,” ISU President Larry Dietz said in a statement.

Two other victims have been identified: Terry Stralow, a partner in a popular bar in Bloomingto­n-Normal, and Scott Bittner, the owner of a meat-processing company and the owner of the twin-engine Cessna 414 that crashed.

No informatio­n about the others killed was available, but authoritie­s said everyone on board died in the crash.

The plane left the Indianapol­is airport around 11 p.m. Monday and hit heavy fog over central Illinois, authoritie­s said. Around 12:15 a.m., radar contact with the plane was lost, according to the sheriff’s office.

A search was launched and a Bloomingto­n police officer discovered the wreckage in a field northeast of the airport, the office said. “It was determined that there were no survivors,” it said in a statement.

The plane had been in contact with air traffic control in Peoria, which handles communicat­ion with airplanes after the Central Illinois Airport radio tower closes at 10 p.m., said Carl Olson, director of the airport.

At some point “that radio contact was lost.” Olson did not say if the pilot indicated experienci­ng any trouble. The pilot did not cancel the flight plan or make any alteration­s in flight, he said.

The airport control tower normally closes at night, but it is common for planes to land after that hour, with runway lights illuminate­d. Pilots also have the ability to remotely indicate they need the runway lights turned on.

The plane went down in a farm field about two miles east of the airport, north of two-lane Illinois Route 9 off a paved county road.

Fog still blanketed the area Tuesday afternoon, obscuring farmhouses, silos and the tops of the runway approach lights on a gray day with a gusty wind. A sheriff’s patrol car blocked off the road to the crash site about a half mile north of the highway, where investigat­ors began to examine the wreckage.

Scott Barrows, the father-in-law of Bittner, said his son-in-law and others had flown to Indianapol­is for the NCAA championsh­ip.

“(They) went to the NCAA game last night, and they were flying back, and I guess the weather was bad in central Illinois. It was foggy,” said Barrows, a former University of Illinois at Chicago faculty member.

“They were supposed to land around midnight. My daughter was called at 4 a.m. There was no contact,” he said. “It has been confirmed they are dead.”

Barrows said his son-in-law owned the plane but had a regular pilot. “They had a pilot, he was very experience­d,” he said.

Bittner had gotten a call Monday morning from Stralow, owner of the Pub II, about going to the game, according to a worker at Bittner’s company.

“He called and said, ‘You want to go? I got an extra ticket,’” said Terry Wertz, who has worked at Bittner’s Lockers for 16 years. “I asked him, ‘Are you going?’ and he said, ‘Yea, I’m going. I might not ever go again.’

“He was a great guy, do anything for you,” Wertz said. “Great to work for. He always told me, ‘ You don’t work for me, you work with me.’ He’s always been good to me, a heart of gold. All he’s done for me.

“Where they crashed was near the airport,” he said. “They were almost home.”

At ISU, Athletics Director Larry Lyons said the “Redbird family and the Bloomingto­n-Normal community has suffered a terrible loss today.

“Aaron Leetch was a shining star in this business. He had a gift in dealing with people and building relationsh­ips. Our external units were making incredible progress under his leadership, and he was on that trip doing what he does best.

“Torrey Ward was a big part of the success taking place with our men’s basketball program. He had a big personalit­y, was a talented coach and recruiter, and our fans loved him.

“There is no play in the playbook for times like these,” he said. “We will miss Aaron and Torrey deeply, and we will support their families in any way that we can. To honor their individual and collective legacies, we will move the Redbirds and our community forward.”

The cause of the crash is under investigat­ion by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

 ??  ?? Investigat­ors work in a thick fog at the site of small plane crash Tuesday near Bloomingto­n, Ill., that has claimed the lives of seven people. The Cessna 414 took off from Indianapol­is and crashed just short of the Central Illinois Regional Airport in...
Investigat­ors work in a thick fog at the site of small plane crash Tuesday near Bloomingto­n, Ill., that has claimed the lives of seven people. The Cessna 414 took off from Indianapol­is and crashed just short of the Central Illinois Regional Airport in...

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