Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Plane Crash Victim Identified; Witnesses Describe 'Explosion'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2019 08:15 PM

    GABRIOLA ISLAND, B.C. - Friends are identifying a kind, caring and skilled pilot among those killed in a plane crash on Gabriola Island.

     

    Alex Bahlsen was born in Germany and moved to Cayley, Alta., around 30 years ago, Rasmus Rydstrom-Poulsen said Wednesday.

     

    About a year ago, he moved to Mill Bay, B.C., to live with his wife.

     

    "He was a kind, caring, very intelligent, adventurous and fun guy — very talented," said Rydstrom-Poulsen, who is in contact with Bahlsen's family.

     

    Flying was a passion for Bahlsen, who was a flight instructor, charter pilot and owned an airstrip before leaving Alberta.

     

    He was also a proud grandfather and "very good friend," who kept up with the latest technologies, he said.

     

     

    The BC Coroners Service said members of its special investigations unit arrived on the island Wednesday to begin their work to determine the identities of those who died and the circumstances that led to their deaths.

     

    First responders received reports of a possible plane crash shortly after 6 p.m. on Tuesday.

     

    The BC Coroners Service and the RCMP confirmed there were multiple fatalities when the small plane went down in a wooded residential area, creating a "significant" debris field.

     

    The Transportation Safety Board says it is investigating the crash of a piston twin-engine aircraft that was flying from the Eastern Sierra Regional Airport in Bishop, Calif., to Nanaimo.

     

    "The aircraft was extensively broken up due to high impact forces," the board said in a news release, adding its investigation team was unable to determine the aircraft registration on Wednesday but it will work to continue verifying that information on Thursday.

     

    "The total number of people on board has not been verified and no one on board has been identified," the board says.

     

    It says the aircraft was on a private-pleasure flight. The plane was in the process of conducting an instrument approach to the airport in Nanaimo when the crash occurred, the board said.

     

    Gabriola Island, which has a population of about 4,000, is a 20-minute ferry ride east of Nanaimo.

     

    Michael Tumbach, manager at NXT LVL Motors Inc. in Cayley, said Bahlsen would let the company host private car racing events on the airstrip in Alberta.

     

    "Alex would actually shut down his airstrip and let us drag race on it," he said.

     

    Bahlsen was a generous man and always invited guys from the shop into his house, he said.

     

    "He was always willing to help out and make sure everyone else had a good time."

     

    The shop took care of Bahlsen's personal vehicles, including a snow plow for the strip, Tumbach added.

     

    A witness to the crash described a plane hurtling toward the ground and a "huge explosion."

     

    Dave Holme said he ran to look for survivors.

     

    "I saw the plane spiralling toward the ground. The engines were going ... but they didn't sound normal," Holme recalled Wednesday.

     

    "About five houses down from us, I saw it nose-dive into the ground, and then the explosion was just immense ... all the houses completely shook."

     

    Holme said he ran into the bushes at the crash site and yelled to see if anyone was alive and able to respond.

     

    "I was probably within, I'd have to say, five feet of the fuselage ... and just fire — all around me, the ground was literally on fire.

     

    "I saw the rear end of the plane sticking out of the ground. ... I couldn't see any wings. Part of the motor was on one part of the property and the other part of the motor was over on the other side of the property. It hit with such force, it just disintegrated the plane."

     

    The plane crashed in thick brush and scorch marks were visible on trees in the area of the crash, which is near a beach.

     

    Rick Mayes said he lives near the crash site. He said he did not see the plane go down but felt the impact.

     

    "It shook my house so hard that I thought it was an earthquake," said Mayes. "It was unbelievable."

     

    Cecil Hagen said he grabbed his flashlight and went to look outside after hearing what sounded like a loud thump followed by an explosion on Tuesday night.

     

    "It hit hard. It was really loud," he said.

     

    Hagen said he got in his car and drove to where he thought the noise came from and saw flames shooting more than a metre high in the nearby trees.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Police Apologize To Black Community For Pain Caused By Street Checks

    Halifax Police Apologize To Black Community For Pain Caused By Street Checks
    Halifax's police chief has issued a formal apology to Nova Scotia's black community today over the practice of street checks.    

    Halifax Police Apologize To Black Community For Pain Caused By Street Checks

    Scheer Heads To Conservative Heartland After A Bruising Week Of Challenges

    OTTAWA - Andrew Scheer heads into the Conservative heartland of Alberta on Friday where he'll make a pitch to some of the party's most fervent supporters about why he ought to keep his job as federal leader and how he intends to do it.    

    Scheer Heads To Conservative Heartland After A Bruising Week Of Challenges

    Hockey Reckoning Amid Renewed Call For Independent Body To Probe Abuse

    Hockey Reckoning Amid Renewed Call For Independent Body To Probe Abuse
    Former Olympic skier Allison Forsyth says if such an organization had existed in the late 1990s, it likely could have prevented her alleged abuse by coach Bertrand Charest.

    Hockey Reckoning Amid Renewed Call For Independent Body To Probe Abuse

    Despite U.S. Calls For More, Canada's Defence Spending Set To Stay The Same

    Despite U.S. Calls For More, Canada's Defence Spending Set To Stay The Same
    OTTAWA - Canadian military spending is expected to remain stagnant this year despite calls from the U.S. to step it up.

    Despite U.S. Calls For More, Canada's Defence Spending Set To Stay The Same

    Edmonton Mayor Says He Could Help Trudeau Deal With Angry Western Premiers

    Don Iveson said much of the anger on the Prairies is coming from economic uncertainty.

    Edmonton Mayor Says He Could Help Trudeau Deal With Angry Western Premiers

    Ontario Court Dismisses Subway's Lawsuit Against CBC Over Chicken Report

    Ontario Court Dismisses Subway's Lawsuit Against CBC Over Chicken Report
    Subway sued both the CBC and Trent University, which runs the lab, for defamation over a February 2017 broadcast of "Marketplace" and the accompanying online publications about the chain's Canadian chicken products.

    Ontario Court Dismisses Subway's Lawsuit Against CBC Over Chicken Report