when it crashed into a forest preserve Tuesday afternoon, killing the
two men aboard and setting off an investigation into the
still-unexplained cause.
Officials said the Learjet 35A, owned by Royal Air Charter of
Debris was scattered in the woods of a
Officials found the bodies in the wreckage, but said they might not be able to recover them until Wednesday.
Authorities offered no initial theories about what caused the crash.
“We will look at the systems, the structure, the engine,” said senior safety investigator
But
“When they go in nose down, that’s a classic stall spin. There’s almost no other option,” Mark said.
The stall could have occurred as the plane just circled to make the final approach to the runway, experts said.
A circling approach was required Tuesday because the
winds were out of the west-northwest. The circling pattern is a more
complicated maneuver than just coming in straight.
Authorities did not release the identities of the pilot and co-pilot killed in the crash, and officials at
But spokesman
The Learjet 35A is a fixed-wing, two-engine craft with seating for 10. Brian Biernacke, 55, a professional pilot from
“Even if you lost an engine, the airplane would fly great,” he said.
Chicago Executive saw its last fatal crash in
According to NTSB records,
Court and
In 1999, the company agreed to pay a
fine for maintenance and record-keeping violations. Federal prosecutors
complained the company didn’t conduct scheduled inspections of fleet
engines, propellers and wing flaps.
crash site, said 20 minutes before the plane came down he had been
walking his two dogs on that very spot. He said he was resting at home
when he heard a noise that he thought came from his furnace.
Only later, when he heard the racket from a
helicopter hovering above the site, did he realize something far more
serious had happened — and that he had been lucky to come home when he
had.
“I was thinking, ‘How weird is this? You go for a walk and get hit by a Learjet,’ ” he said. “It’s kind of bizarre.”
—
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