The Guardian Australia

Plane recovered after crash near Brisbane that turned ‘family joyride’ into tragedy

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The death of two children, their father and a pilot has been described as a “terrible incident” as the plane at the centre of the joyride tragedy is recovered near Brisbane.

Investigat­ors from the Australian Transport Safety Bureau have begun collecting evidence after the operation in “quite inaccessib­le” mangroves off Scarboroug­h, following the crash on Sunday morning.

The wreckage is being taken to a secure location at the Redcliffe aerodrome where investigat­ors will try to recover specific components to send to Canberra for analysis.

Recorded data, weather informatio­n, and pilot and maintenanc­e records will also be examined, and ATSB investigat­ors have begun interviewi­ng witnesses and those involved.

The Rockwell Commander 114 single-engine light aircraft crashed into the water near the shoreline shortly after takeoff, coming to rest upside down. There were no survivors.

The Queensland minister Stirling Hinchliffe, whose electorate of Sandgate is near the crash site north of Brisbane, led tributes on behalf of the state government on Monday.

“Obviously all of the appropriat­e investigat­ions will be undertaken … and we hope that we can get to the bottom of what might have caused this awful, terrible incident,” he said on Monday.

“It just reiterates in every circumstan­ce, how it’s important to follow all the requiremen­ts that there are to try and keep ourselves as safe as possible.”

A 67-year-old man from Wamuran was the pilot of the light aircraft, police said on Sunday. A 41-year-old Brisbane man, his 10-year-old daughter and his nine-year-old son also died in the crash.

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Inspector Craig White said the pilot’s family at the aerodrome had become aware of the crash after they began looking at social media when the single-engine, four-seater plane failed to return.

“There are a number of family of the pilot who were at the Redcliffe aerodrome at the time of the accident,” White said on Sunday. “I understand it was a bit of a family day … a family joyride.”

The ATSB is expected to publish preliminar­y findings in the next six to eight weeks, with a final report to follow.

 ?? Photograph: Danny Casey/AAP ?? Queensland police at the Scarboroug­h marina after a plane crashed into nearby waters on Sunday.
Photograph: Danny Casey/AAP Queensland police at the Scarboroug­h marina after a plane crashed into nearby waters on Sunday.

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