The Columbus Dispatch

Remains found in Lake Erie could be crash victim’s

- By Joe Mandak

Remains found by someone fishing in Lake Erie might belong to one of three victims unaccounte­d for in a plane crash that killed six suburban Columbus residents just off the Cleveland shore last year, a Pennsylvan­ia coroner said Friday.

Erie County Coroner Lyell Cook hopes DNA tests will identify the leg found about 8 p.m. Thursday near the Elk Creek Access to the lake, in Lake City, about 80 miles northeast of Cleveland.

The lake’s currents flow toward Pennsylvan­ia and it’s not uncommon for remains from as far away as Detroit and Cleveland to wash up along the Pennsylvan­ia shoreline, Cook said.

The Dec. 29 crash killed six people, but the remains of only three have been found: pilot John Fleming, 45, of Dublin; his 15-year-old son, Jack; and a family friend, Brian Casey, 50, of Powell. The bodies of Fleming’s wife, 46-year-old Sue; their 14-yeaer-old son, Andrew; and Casey’s daughter, 19-year-old Megan, could not be recovered. Cleveland officials searched for their remains for about three weeks.

The victims were flying back to Columbus after attending a Cleveland Cavaliers game when the plane crashed.

A preliminar­y report by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said John Fleming, a Columbus businessma­n, had received a certificat­ion to fly the Cessna Citation 525 just 21 days before the crash. The NTSB report didn’t indicate why the plane suddenly lost altitude and crashed about a minute after taking off from Burke Lakefront Airport shortly before 11 o’clock that night.

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