Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta Mounties Are Still Searching For Body Of 2nd Victim In Plane Crash

The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2015 12:03 PM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Mounties are still searching for the body of one of two men killed when two planes collided mid-air in northeastern Alberta.
     
    Wood Buffalo RCMP Cpl. George Cameron says a search team has recovered the body of a 33-year-old Edmonton man, but not that of a 32-year-old man from Fort McMurray.
     
    Police are not releasing the men's names.
     
    The pair were in a Cessna 172 that collided mid-air with a Cessna 185 on Sunday night east of Fort McMurray.
     
    The Cessna 185 landed safely and the lone pilot was uninjured.
     
    McMurray Aviation posted a news release to its Facebook page identifying the dead as flight instructor Nabeel Chaudhry and student Amjed Ahmed.
     
    The company says both aircraft were allowed to be in the same air space but further details won't be released until the Transportation Safety Board concludes its investigation.
     
    John Cottreau, spokesman for the TSB, says investigators have determined the crash was unsurvivable.
     
    "From what I heard from our investigators, the aircraft is completely destroyed," he said Wednesday from Hull, Quebec.
     
    "The Cessna 172 left the Fort McMurray airport destined for the northeast practice area, an area of airspace for practising flying." Cottreau said.
     
    "The Cessna 175 originated from a lake in northwestern Saskatchewan and was bound for the Fort McMurray airport."
     
    Cottreau says it's too early to say how and why the collision happened.
     
    The debris field is about one square kilometre, Cameron said.
     
    "The wreckage is scattered in that square kilometre area, but the searchers won't just be focusing on that square kilometre, they will be going outside the area as well."
     
    Cameron says the site is very isolated and difficult to get to.
     
    "We can get there with our all-terrain vehicles, our 4x4s to a certain point and then they hike in" about three to four kilometres to reach the debris field, Cameron said.
     
    Anyone with information about the crash, or any witnesses, are asked to call police.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Journalist On Trial In Egypt Tries To Separate Himself From Employer

    Prosecutors are set to begin closing arguments Monday in the retrial of Mohamed Fahmy on widely-denounced terror charges.

    Canadian Journalist On Trial In Egypt Tries To Separate Himself From Employer

    Millionaire British NRI Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Murdered In Punjab Over A Property Dispute

    Deputy Commissioner of Police told that his friend and business partner, Baldev Singh Deol, and hisdriver strangled Power at Anandpur Sahib in Ropar

    Millionaire British NRI Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Murdered In Punjab Over A Property Dispute

    Crews Fighting Brush Fire In Indian Arm, B.C., Near Buntzen Lake

    Crews Fighting Brush Fire In Indian Arm, B.C., Near Buntzen Lake
    The B.C. Wildfire Management Branch says it has not taken over firefighting operations but is assisting the Sasamat Volunteer Fire Department.

    Crews Fighting Brush Fire In Indian Arm, B.C., Near Buntzen Lake

    Journalist Accused Of Fabricating Stories Admits 'Errors Of Judgment' On Facebook

    Journalist Accused Of Fabricating Stories Admits 'Errors Of Judgment' On Facebook
    MONTREAL — Journalist Francois Bugingo published a post on Face

    Journalist Accused Of Fabricating Stories Admits 'Errors Of Judgment' On Facebook

    Another Friday Draw And Still No Winner Of The $50 Million Lotto Max Jackpot

    Another Friday Draw And Still No Winner Of The $50 Million Lotto Max Jackpot
    Fifty MaxMillions prizes of $1-million each were available in last night's draw, and winning tickets were sold for 21 of them.

    Another Friday Draw And Still No Winner Of The $50 Million Lotto Max Jackpot

    Old Property Tax Methods Of Cities Not Fair Say Main Street Canada Businesses

    Old Property Tax Methods Of Cities Not Fair Say Main Street Canada Businesses
    HALIFAX — Matina Aucoin says she can't understand why she has to send $3,800 a year in property tax to her city government for a parking lot that requires no service.

    Old Property Tax Methods Of Cities Not Fair Say Main Street Canada Businesses