Eugene Peltola Carried 520Lbs of Moose Product During Fatal Flight

  • 10 months ago
"Unlock the keys to your financial future and legacy –
Get it now -- https://shorturl.at/nvCU5 "

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eugene Peltola Carried 520Lbs of Moose Product During Fatal Flight.
The plane that crashed this month in Southwest Alaska, killing Eugene “Buzzy” Peltola Jr., was loaded down with moose meat and antlers, according to the first report on the crash released Thursday by the National Transportation Safety Board.

Peltola, the husband of Alaska U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola, was flying a second and final load of meat out of a remote camp when the crash occurred, investigators say in a five-page preliminary report issued Thursday. A hunter told investigators that the load was 50 to 70 pounds heavier than the first.

[Hundreds of mourners gather in Bethel for funeral of Eugene ‘Buzzy’ Peltola Jr.]

The 57-year-old was the pilot and only person aboard the Piper Super Cub that went down about 64 miles northeast of the village of St. Mary’s in mountainous terrain the evening of Sept. 12. Peltola initially survived the crash but died within two hours, before rescuers could arrive, authorities say. Two hunters pulled him from the plane and provided medical care.

Peltola’s first flight out that day was uneventful, according to the new report.

Before he took off again, the second load of meat was “strapped into the rear passenger seat area with both the seatbelt and rope,” lead investigator Eliott Simpson wrote. Meat was also loaded into the plane’s belly pod that had no gear, such as tie-downs, to secure it. Peltola tied moose antlers to the right wing strut.

The hunters watched as Peltola got into the plane and took off; one recorded a video, the report states. They noticed his ground roll took longer the second time, it said, “and that the airplane appeared to be more ‘labored’ than during the previous flight.”

As the Super Cub reached the end of the airstrip, it pitched up and turned sharply to the right but flew out of view behind a ridge instead of climbing, Simpson wrote. “The group initially thought that the pickup had been successful, but the airplane did not reappear from behind the ridge. The group ran to the top of the ridgeline, looked down, and saw that the airplane had crashed.”

The plane’s cargo at the crash site weighed about 520 pounds, mostly moose meat and antlers, according to the report. About 150 pounds of meat was found in the forward section of the belly pod, with the rest “firmly secured” in the rear cabin seating area.

The plane’s emergency locator transmitter activated during the accident, sending an alert to the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center just after 8:45 p.m., the report states. The hunters said an Alaska Air National Guard helicopter arrived by 2 a.m.

A federal team of investigators including the NTSB got to the crash scene a few days later. Any official findings on the probable cause of the

Recommended