Saskatchewan Plane Crash: 2 Planes-Air Touched Wings Before Deadly Crash, Say Investigators

CP  |  By Posted: Updated: 05/18/2012 8:09 am

WINNIPEG - A transport official says a mid-air collision that killed five people in Saskatchewan occurred when the left wings of the two small planes came into contact.

Wreckage from the Piper PA-28 and Lake Buccaneer amphibious plane includes marks that show the wings of the single-engine aircraft touched before the planes plummeted almost straight down, Peter Hildebrand of the Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday.

"The wreckage came down almost vertically in its final trajectory," said Hildebrand, who added that there was no way anyone could have survived the impact.

The crash occurred Saturday near St. Brieux northeast of Saskatoon. The Piper's three occupants — two men and an 11-year-old boy — were from rural Alberta. A Regina couple were in the Buccaneer.

Despite good weather, it may have been difficult for the pilots to judge each other's speed and distance, because they were likely at 90-degree angles to each other, Hildebrand said. Flight plans suggest the Piper would have been heading east while the Lake Buccaneer was heading north toward La Ronge.

"It may be difficult to see other aircraft, depending on your angle, depending on the structure of aircraft components and other background visual information the pilots might be seeing," Hildebrand said.

"If aircraft approach head-on, for example, then there's no relative movement that's apparent to you in the windshield if you're looking out as a pilot. If aircraft approach at a 90-degree angle, that's another scenario where it's difficult to see because ... the angle stays the same and you don't have relative movement across the windshield."

Hildebrand cautioned that the investigation is in its early stages and is facing challenges. The wreckage is scattered over a wide area and some of it is submerged in a marsh.

Investigators still want to recover flight instruments or electronic equipment that could assist in the investigation. They would also like to interview anyone who may have seen what happened.

Police have not yet released the names of the five people killed, but family members say the three on board the Piper were Denny Loree, Eric Donovan and his 11-year-old son, Wade — all from Mossleigh, Alta. They were on their way to St. Brieux to pick up farm equipment, according to a cousin.

An obituary in a Saskatchewan newspaper said Joy and Eric Jackson of Regina were the other two people killed in the crash.

Hildebrand said mid-air collisions are rare in Canada. There had been only 16 in the last 10 years before Saturday.

Loading Slideshow...
  • RCMP Corporal Rob King speaks with media a Saturday mid-air collision near St. Brieux, Sask., Sunday, May 13, 2012. Transportation Safety Board investigators are on their way to the scene of Saturday's midair collision in northern Saskatchewan that killed five people. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

  • Wreckage of one of two planes that crashed near St. Brieux, Sask., Sunday, May 13,2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

  • RCMP Corporal Rob King speaks with media near one of two plane crash sites near St. Brieux, Sask, Sunday, May 13,2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

  • A piece of a plane, believed to be a wing, that was found by a local farmer, after a small plane mid-air collision near St. Brieux, Sask. Sunday, May 13,2012. A Piper PA-28 and a Lake Buccaneer amphibious plane somehow came into contact with each other Satuday morning. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

  • The RCMP underwater recovery team searches the wreckage of one of two plane involved in a mid-air collision, near St. Brieux,Sask. on Sunday March 13, 2012. Transportation Safety Board investigators are on their way to the scene of Saturday's midair collision in northern Saskatchewan that killed five people. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

  • The RCMP underwater recovery team searches the wreckage of one of two plane involved in a mid-air collision, near St. Brieux,Sask. on Sunday March 13, 2012. Transportation Safety Board investigators are on their way to the scene of Saturday's midair collision in northern Saskatchewan that killed five people. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards



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WINNIPEG - A transport official says a mid-air collision that killed five people in Saskatchewan occurred when the left wings of the two small planes came into contact.Wreckage from the Piper PA-28 an...
WINNIPEG - A transport official says a mid-air collision that killed five people in Saskatchewan occurred when the left wings of the two small planes came into contact.Wreckage from the Piper PA-28 an...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greysells2
grey cells matter
02:41 PM on 05/16/2012
Just wait until Canada and the US have a substantial number of surveilance drones in the air doing all manner of business, from anti drug trafficing, smuggling supression, illegal immigrant border control, vehicle traffic monitoring, forest fires, forest diseases, timber cruising, mineral exploration, sovereignty patrols and damage assessments from natural disasters like floods.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trying2help
mom doc
09:56 PM on 05/15/2012
Ahem- this is why we need airspace control everywhere in Canada. One plane had a fight plan- the other- none- so why the collision? Hmmn- everyone needs a flight plan and to be under air traffic control. Not happening anytime soon I can see.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nete peedham
10:16 AM on 05/16/2012
Since you know everything, why didn't you prevent the collision?