A Canadian family of five has been identified as the victims of the single-engine plane crash in Nashville, Tennessee, authorities announced on Wednesday.
The Metro Nashville Police Department identified the victims as pilot Victor Dotsenko, 43, his wife, Rimma Dotsenko, 39, and their three children, David, 12, Adam, 10, and Emma, 7.
The plane crashed Monday evening, just off the eastbound lanes of Interstate 40 after the pilot reported a total loss of engine power on Monday night, according to a National Transportation Safety Board official.
The family lived in King Township, which is located just north of Toronto in Canada. King Township Mayor Steve Pellegrini announced in a statement that this is “a heartbreaking and devastating loss for our tight-knit community.”
The plane was en route to Nashville from Mount Sterling, Kentucky, when it crashed about 3 miles from Nashville’s John Tune Airport, Aaron McCarter, an NTSB air safety investigator, said at a press conference Tuesday.
The flight had originated from Ontario, Canada, before it made stops in Erie, Pennsylvania, and Mount Sterling, McCarter said
During the flight, there were no reports of any mechanical irregularities or anomalies. However, upon approaching John Tune Airport, the plane ascended and passed overhead at 2,500 feet before reporting a catastrophic, complete loss of engine power, according to McCarter.
The control tower at John Tune Airport received the message about the plane experiencing engine and power failure at around 7:40 p.m., with the pilot requesting permission to land, which was granted, according to Don Aaron, public affairs director for the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department.
Air traffic control, which was in communication with the pilot, declared an emergency on behalf of the pilot and offered assistance in landing at the airport. The plane then made a U-turn and crashed into the road on Interstate 40 East, between mile marker 201 and 202, McCarter said.
After the crash, it then tumbled, stopped on a hill and burst into flames, killing all the passengers on board, McCarter said.
The pilot contacted the tower and said the aircraft was not going to make it before the crash, according to police
The plane wreckage is now being transported to a facility in Springfield, Tennessee, where the investigation will continue to determine what caused the engine failure.
Witnesses told police the plane was in distress as it came over the interstate, crashing just behind a Costco, Aaron said.
A spokesperson for the Nashville Fire Department said the plane imploded on impact. The “impact was catastrophic and did not leave any survivors,” the representative said.
The fire department was met with heavy flames as they reached the scene, but they were able to extinguish it and preserve evidence from the scene.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WZTV) — Three children and two adults have died in the single engine plane crash Monday night near Interstate 40 in West Nashville, a NationalTransportation Safety Board spokesperson confirmed.
Authorities are investigating after the Piper PA-32 airplane was forced to make the emergency landing.
The crash occurred near I-40 east at Mile Marker 202, three miles from John C. Tune Airport. The five people killed were all on board the flight and died as a result of the crash.NTSB confirmed all five individuals were Canadian citizens. They were identified as pilot Victor Dotsenko, 43, his wife, Rimma Dotsenko, 39, and their three children, David, 12, Adam, 10 and Emma, 7.
NTSB’s Aaron McCarter says the flight was in route from Mt. Sterling, Kentucky with a normal flight track at 10,500 feet before the deadly incident. The spokesperson adds there were no reports of any mechanical irregularities or anomalies beforehand.
The Canadian-registered aircraft, which originated from Ontario, was in route John C. Tune Airport when“for unknown reasons, the aircraft descended and approached John C. Tune Airport and passed over at 2,500 feet,” McCarter says.
The pilot reported that he was going to pass over the airport at 2,500 feet, but shortly after, he reported what McCarter says was a “catastrophic engine loss of power.””Very quickly there after, the pilot reported a catastrophic engine loss of power or a loss of engine power, a complete loss of engine power. No emergency was declared by the pilot, however ATC, which was in communications with the pilot, declared an emergency on the pilot’s behalf and offered assistance,” McCarter says.
NTSB adds the airplane then passed overhead, made a U-turn and impacted the road. The plane tumbled, came to rest and burst into flames near the interstate.
According to MNPD spokesperson Don Aaron, at approximately 7:40 p.m. the control tower at John C. Tune Airport received a message from an aircraft saying it was experiencing engine and power failure and needed emergency approval to land.
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