The Capital

Officials release identities of 6 killed at Dallas air show

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DALLAS — Officials on Monday identified the six men killed in a deadly collision between two vintage military aircraft at a Dallas air show, all of whom were experience­d aviators with years of flight training.

The Commemorat­ive Air Force, which put on the show, identified the victims as Terry Barker, Craig Hutain, Kevin “K5” Michels, Dan Ragan, Leonard “Len” Root and Curt Rowe. They died Saturday when a World War II-era B-17 bomber and a Kingcobra fighter plane collided and crashed in a ball of flames, horrifying spectators who had gathered for the air show that opened on Veterans Day.

Several videos posted on social media show the fighter plane flying into the bomber.

All of the men were volunteers, but each had gone through a strict process of logging hours and training flights and were vetted carefully, Hank Coates, the CEO of Commemorat­ive Air Force said at a weekend news conference.

“This is not their first rodeo,” Coates said. “These guys are very well versed. Many of them are airline pilots, retired airline pilots, retired military pilots like myself.

Officials have not publicly identified which of the victims was piloting the aircrafts.

Hutain, of Montgomery, Texas, has been a commercial airline pilot since 1985. He started flying at the age of 10 and had logged more than 34,500 flight hours, according to his LinkedIn page.

In a recent interview with Vintage Aviation News posted on YouTube, Hutain described aviation as a “lifelong obsession” passed down from his father, a bomber pilot in World War

II.

“It’s near and dear to my heart,” Hutain said.

Armin Mizani, the mayor of Keller, Texas, said Barker was a retired pilot who lived in Keller, a town of 50,000, where many of the residents know each other.

“It’s definitely a big loss in our community,” he said. “We’re grieving.”

Barker was an Army veteran who flew helicopter­s during his military service. He later worked for American Airlines for 36 years before retiring in 2020, Mizani said.

Rowe, a member of the Ohio Wing Civil Air Patrol, was a crew chief on the B-17, his brother-in-law Andy Keller said Sunday.

Root, also from Keller, was a pilot and manager for the Gulf Coast Wing of the Commemorat­ive Air Force who worked over the last year as a contract commercial pilot for various companies, according to his LinkedIn page.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is investigat­ing the collision, including why both aircraft were flying at the same altitude and in the same air space, NTSB member Michael Graham said at a Sunday news conference.

Graham said investigat­ors are analyzing radar and video footage to pinpoint the exact location of collision.

He said most of debris from the crash was scattered on the airport property and will be examined, along with audio recordings from the air traffic control tower, pilot training records and aircraft maintenanc­e records.

Neither aircraft was equipped with a flight-data recorder or a cockpit voice recorder, separate devices referred to collective­ly as the black boxes, and neither were required to have those devices, Graham said.

“At this point, we will not speculate” on the cause, Graham said.

A preliminar­y report from the NTSB is expected in four to six weeks, while a final report will take up to 18 months to complete.

The crash came three years after the crash of a bomber in Connecticu­t that killed seven and amid ongoing concern about the safety of air shows involving older warplanes. The company that owned the planes flying in the Wings Over Dallas show has had other crashes in its more than 60-year history.

 ?? LARRY PETTERBORG ?? The NTSB is investigat­ing why both aircraft, a Kingcobra fighter and a B-17 bomber, were flying at the same altitude in the deadly collision Saturday in Dallas.
LARRY PETTERBORG The NTSB is investigat­ing why both aircraft, a Kingcobra fighter and a B-17 bomber, were flying at the same altitude in the deadly collision Saturday in Dallas.

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