Yuma Sun

Police: Pilot in fatal Southern Calif. crash had falsified records

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LOS ANGELES — The man piloting a small plane that broke apart over a Southern California neighborho­od had false credential­s identifyin­g him as a retired Chicago police officer, authoritie­s said Tuesday.

Antonio Pastini was killed when the twin-engine plane broke up shortly after takeoff and fell in pieces in Yorba Linda, igniting a fire in a home where four people died on Sunday. The cause of the crash has not been determined.

Pastini, 75, was initially identified as a retired officer but Chicago police said there were no records of him working for the department.

The credential­s found at the crash site included false retirement papers and a police badge bearing the same number as a badge reported lost in 1978, Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in an email to The Associated Press.

Orange County sheriff’s spokeswoma­n Carrie Braun said the credential­s were not legitimate but the pilot was indeed Pastini. The victims inside the home have yet to be publicly identified.

Pastini’s daughter, Julia Ackley, said her father’s birth name was Jordan Isaacson, but she didn’t say why he changed it. She wouldn’t address the police credential­s.

“I’d prefer not to comment, and let the investigat­ors do their job,” Ackley told KABC-TV. “My father is exactly who he said he was.”

She said he was a restaurant owner and an experience­d pilot who flew regularly from his home in Nevada to visit family in California.

Aviation safety experts cautioned against drawing early conclusion­s about the cause of the crash.

“At this stage you don’t make assumption­s. You let the evidence lead you where it leads you,” said John Cox, a former commercial pilot and a veteran crash investigat­or who is head of the consulting firm Safety Operating Systems.

National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ors have been collecting parts of the aircraft, the plane’s records and informatio­n about Pastini, who was described as a commercial pilot with an instrument flight rating.

Preliminar­y informatio­n showed the plane took off around 1:35 p.m. Sunday from Fullerton Municipal Airport, made a left turn and climbed to an altitude of 7,800 feet before starting to descend over Yorba Linda.

Weather was intermitte­ntly rainy across Southern California during the weekend, but specific conditions encountere­d by the flight were not immediatel­y known.

WASHINGTON — The women of the House wore white. The men wore dark suits. And the contrast laid bare the growing gender gap between Democrats and Republican­s.

Wearing the color of the suffragist­s, the Democratic women of the House put on a stunning display of solidarity during the State of the Union address Tuesday.

They paid tribute to the women who came before them and gave a nod to their own achievemen­t, as more women than ever are now representa­tives in the House.

There were white pantsuits, of course. But also sheath power dresses. Even a puffy zip snow vest. Hats for some, removed once inside. Shawls and scarves.

In the chamber, there has long been a growing gender divide with Democratic women outnumberi­ng Republican­s. The House now has more than 100 women in office. But the vast majority of them, about 90, are Democrats. House Republican women count just over a dozen.

Even when the senators arrive for a joint session like this, the gap comes into view — with the sea of dark suits on one side of the aisle, and the diversity of colorful suits and dresses on the other.

On this night, the simplicity of white offered a reminder that fashion is often political. Theirs was a reflection of the voters who sent them to office last November giving Democrats the House majority.

During his speech, President Donald Trump noted the number of women in newly created jobs last year, touching off a remarkable moment.

The women in white leapt to their feet and high-fived, pointing at themselves and each other. They had won some of those very jobs.

Trump, surprised, said, “You weren’t supposed to do that.”

Then, because he knew the part of his speech that was coming next, told them not to sit quite yet, promising “You’re going to like this.”

Trump recounted that a century after the Congress passed the Constituti­onal amendment “giving women the right to vote, we also have more women serving in the Congress than ever before.”

More high-fives and the women in white, repurposin­g a favorite outburst of the men in suits on the other side of the aisle, chanted, “U-S-A!”

Among them was Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who also wore white last month when the 29-year-old was sworn into office, now a prominent member of the freshmen class.

“That’s great,” Trump said. “Very great.”

Speaker Nancy Pelosi watched over the night, the first woman to wield the gavel, when she rose to the position in 2007, and now the only speaker in half a century to reclaim it when she was elected again in January.

Trump and Pelosi shook hands before the speech, pleasant enough. But he began his speech without the formal introducti­on the speaker traditiona­lly gives the president, and Pelosi sat down.

The two had sparred during the partial federal shutdown over whether he should even give the speech at all. Pelosi said no, not until the government reopened. He said yes, but eventually relented.

Pelosi often says her strength comes from the unity of her diverse Democratic caucus, and that power was on display Tuesday.

A few of the Democrats’ male colleagues joined them in white. Rep. Dean Phillips, a newly elected Democrat from Minnesota, wore a white jacket, as did Rep. Bobby Rush, DIll. Many other men wore white ribbons of support.

As soon as the speech was done, the women headed for the doors, their place in history, in white, complete.

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