The Boston Globe

Officials probe Va. plane crash

Four dead after sonic boom scare

- By Julian E. Barnes and Livia Albeck-Ripka

Federal authoritie­s on Monday were investigat­ing what caused a private aircraft to fly into restricted airspace over Washington, D.C., on Sunday, triggering a response by military jets that caused a sonic boom to be heard across much of the region before the small plane crashed in Virginia, killing all four people onboard.

The private business jet went down near Montebello, Va., the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said. A spokespers­on for the Virginia State Police said in a statement Monday that emergency responders were able to reach the wreckage on foot about four hours after receiving a report of a plane crash.

John Rumpel, who runs Encore Motors of Melbourne, a Florida-based company that owns the aircraft, said in a telephone interview Monday that his daughter, Adina Azarian, his 2-year-old granddaugh­ter, her nanny, and the pilot were on the plane and did not survive.

The plane, a Cessna 560 Citation V, crashed “almost straight down and at a high speed,” he said, adding that the impact caused a crater, and the wreckage was spread over 150 yards. Rumpel had said Sunday that they were returning home to East Hampton, N.Y., after a visit to his home in North Carolina.

Fighter jets were sent from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland after the Cessna entered the restricted airspace, prompting the emergency response to intercept the flight, military and US officials confirmed Sunday.

After the Cessna flew into the restricted area, which includes important national landmarks, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion called the pilot but received no response from that plane, and the military ordered the jets to intercept, a military official said.

The North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, which oversees aerospace control over the United States and Canada, said in a statement that two F-16 jets were deployed on Sunday to intercept the Cessna.

NORAD said that the fighter jets “were authorized to travel at supersonic speeds,” which would have produced the boom that was heard in the region, including in the suburbs of Virginia and Maryland.

Officials later determined that the Cessna did not pose a threat, and the investigat­ion will look into why the pilot did not respond to the FAA. The Cessna was not shot down, officials said.

The Cessna crashed near the George Washington National Forest in Virginia, according to NORAD.

Adam Gerhardt, an NTSB investigat­or, said Monday that the agency would be on the ground for at least three to four days. He said the wreckage was “highly fragmented,” and he described the area as rural and mountainou­s. “It will be a very challengin­g accident site,” he said.

Gerhardt said the inquiry would look at when exactly the pilot became unresponsi­ve and why the plane flew the route that it did. He said it was not yet known if the plane had a cockpit voice recorder or a flight data recorder.

Rumpel said Sunday that he had little informatio­n about the circumstan­ces of the crash, but hoped his daughter, granddaugh­ter, and the others on board had not suffered. His voice breaking, he said that if the plane lost pressuriza­tion, “they all just would have gone to sleep and never woke up.”

“It descended at 20,000 feet a minute, and nobody could survive a crash from that speed,” Rumpel said.

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