Medicine Hat News

‘We’re all in shock:’ Neighbours mourn family of five killed in plane crash

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A small but growing memorial, made up of bouquets and teddy bears, formed outside a home north of Toronto on Thursday as a community grieved a family of five killed in a small plane crash in Nashville.

Victor Dotsenko, 43, his 39-year-old wife Rimma Dotsenko and their three children, 12-year-old David, 10-yearold Adam and seven-year-old Emma, were killed Monday as a single-engine plane crashed alongside a highway near downtown Nashville.

The family, who were the only people aboard the plane, lived in King Township, located about 50 kilometres north of Toronto.

Two of their neighbours, Anne and Leo Amore, said the news has left them and others in their community “heartbroke­n.”

“Just devastated ... we’re all in shock,” Leo Amore said as the pair were on their way to buy flowers to leave outside the family’s home.

Amore said he and Victor Dotsenko would often talk in the driveway. “He was always working on his cars. He just loved his cars and his boats,” he said.

The Dotsenkos were “a wonderful family,” he said, adding their deaths leave a real “emptiness.”

“It’s a real tragedy,” he said.

Anne Amore said the three children were joyful and “full of life,” and the family was “lovely.”

“They were always very, very pleasant, always kind and respectful,” she said.

The family’s deaths have also left students and staff at the children’s school “completely distraught,” a school administra­tor said, calling the family “an integral part” of the community.

Alina Pinsky, co-director of the UMCA Rich Tree Academy, a private school north of Toronto, said the family was part of the school community for many years.

David, Adam and Emma were “the sweetest kids you’ll ever meet,” she said in a phone interview.

“These were the most bright, energyfill­ed kids - everyone in the school loved them, they had so many friends,” Pinsky said. “This was a very, very loved trio in our school.”

David was a kind-hearted jokester, a smart, bright kid with a “wholesome” personalit­y, she said.

Adam was an avid chess player and the school had recently talked about setting up a tournament so he could show the community what he’d been working on, she said.

Emma was a “sweet, kind young girl, always such a good friend” to her classmates, she said.

Their parents were very involved in the school community and had recently attended some performanc­es, Pinsky said.

“We are so sad as a community and as a school,” she said. “The sadness and the grief that the school is feeling today weighs very heavily on our hearts.”

King City’s mayor called the deaths a “heartbreak­ing and devastatin­g loss” for the “tight-knit community.”

Education Minister Stephen Lecce, whose riding includes King City, said he spoke to the mayor Thursday morning to express his condolence­s.

“I do not know the family personally but whenever these types of tragedies take place, they’re so shocking,” he said. “They have impacts in schools and well beyond, so we’re thinking about the family and we’re praying for them.”

Ontario Premier Doug Ford called it a “huge and shocking loss for everyone who knew the Dotsenko family.”

Victor Dotsenko was a member of the Brampton Flying Club, said the club’s general manager, Allan Paige. He did his training at the club and obtained his private pilot licence in November 2022, and continued to fly with the club until he bought his plane in the middle of last year, Paige said.

Dotsenko, who was flying the plane, had radioed air traffic controller­s to report that his engine had shut down, he had overflown John C. Tune airport and had circled around in an attempt to land.

Investigat­or Aaron McCarter of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the flight originated in Ontario and made stops along the way that were likely to gas up, including Erie, Pa., and Mount Sterling, Ky.

The Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada has sent a representa­tive to assist in the crash investigat­ion being led by U.S. authoritie­s.

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