Ontario couple, three children killed in Nashville plane crash
An Ontario couple and their three children have been identified as the five people who died in a plane crash in Nashville.
Nashville police identified the pilot of the single-engine plane as 43-year-old Victor Dotsenko from King Township in a post on X Wednesday night.
The post said Dotsenko’s wife, 39-year-old Rimma, and their three children, 12-year-old David, 10-year-old Adam and seven-year-old Emma, were also killed.
The mayor of King Township, Steve Pellegrini, expressed condolences to the friends and relatives of the family, calling it a “heartbreaking and devastating loss” for the “tight-knit community.”
A single-engine plane crashed alongside a highway in Nashville on Monday evening, killing all five people aboard.
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, Pennsylvania and Mount Sterling, Kentucky.
In a recording of radio transmissions, the pilot told air traffic controllers that his engine had shut down, he had overflown John C. Tune airport and had circled around in an attempt to land. A runway was cleared, but the pilot said the plane had already descended to 1,600 feet and he was too far away.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada said it had assigned a representative to assist in the crash investigation being led by U.S. authorities.
The plane was based at the Brampton Flight Centre, which is owned and operated by the Brampton Flying Club, said its general manager, Allan Paige. He could not say whether the plane took off from there.