Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Plane Carrying Late Jean Lapierre's Brother-in-Law Makes Emergency Landing After Engine Trouble

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2016 12:43 PM
    BONAVENTURE, Que. — A plane carrying about a dozen people, including the brother-in-law of the late Jean Lapierre, landed safely in the Gaspesie region after one of its engines shut down mid-flight.
     
    The twin-engine plane, a Jetstream 32, had left the St-Hubert airport near Montreal on Wednesday night and made a stop in Quebec City on its way to the Iles-de-la-Madeleine.
     
    It made a scheduled stop at Bonaventure airport shortly after one of the engines experienced problems.
     
    Lapierre's brother-in-law, Denis Frechette, was headed to the Iles-de-la-Madeleine to join his wife, who is the late political commentator's only living sibling after a plane crash Tuesday killed the former Liberal cabinet minister, his wife, his two brothers and one of his sisters.
     
    "We had a scheduled stop in Bonaventure," Frechette told RDI, Radio-Canada's all-news chanel. "There was a problem with the engine and they put the emergency measures in place. The crew really put us at ease. The landing with one engine was excellent.
     
    "I am not scared of flying. I travelled a lot in my career, especially to outlying regions. But I took the plane despite the circumstances surrounding my family."
     
    The two crew members also died in the crash earlier this week as they were flying the family to eastern Quebec following the death of Lapierre's father.
     
    SAFETY BOARD BEGINS PROBE INTO PLANE CRASH THAT KILLED JEAN LAPIERRE
     
     
    ILES-DE-LA-MADELEINE, Que. — The plane crash that killed ex-cabinet minister Jean Lapierre and six other people appears to be an "approach-and-landing accident," the Transportation Safety Board of Canada said Wednesday.
     
    Investigator Mike Cunningham said his six-member team has begun collecting as much evidence as possible from the crash site in a field near the airport in Havre-aux-Maisons in the Iles-de-la-Madeleine.
     
    Lapierre, his wife, three of his siblings and both crew members died Tuesday when their chartered plane crashed on its landing approach about three kilometres from the airport. There were no survivors. 
     
    Cunningham said the so-called approach-and-landing phase of flight is of particular concern to the safety board and to similar investigative agencies around the world.
     
    "There are quite a few accidents that occur in the approach-and-landing phase and we'll be looking in detail at that," he told reporters.
     
    Cunningham said his team will likely grow in numbers and that Quebec provincial police and the Canadian Coast Guard, which is conducting aerial photography of the crash site, are helping.
     
    "The big part of the investigation right now is all about data collection," he said. "Basically, we don't leave any stone unturned. We collect all the information we need to analyze any possible scenario that may have contributed to the cause of the accident."  
     
    He added that once the plane wreckage has been documented on-site, the whole aircraft will be transported to the safety board's engineering office in Ottawa for analysis and testing.
     
    The safety board said the aircraft was not equipped with, nor was it required to carry, a cockpit voice recorder or a flight data recorder.
     
     
    "However, the team will be reviewing any electronic components on the aircraft from which they can retrieve data to help understand the flight profile," a statement said.
     
    Provincial police spokeswoman Martine Asselin said officers have spoken with about 10 people, mostly witnesses to the crash but also members of the victims' families.
     
    The family of Pascal Gosselin, the plane's pilot, said in a statement it would fully co-operate with investigators.
     
    "The family is devastated," the release said. "We cannot explain the inexplicable. At this time, we are all hoping for answers that, unfortunately, will not come today."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Because It's 2018: Canadian Bank Note Will Feature A Woman, Justin Trudeau Declares

    Because It's 2018: Canadian Bank Note Will Feature A Woman, Justin Trudeau Declares
     am pleased to announce today, right here, that a Canadian woman will be featured on the very first of the next series of bills expected in 2018

    Because It's 2018: Canadian Bank Note Will Feature A Woman, Justin Trudeau Declares

    Personal Location Device Helps Searchers Find Missing Snowmobiler's Body In B.C.

    He went off on his own on Sunday, and a search began Tuesday morning after he failed to return as expected.

    Personal Location Device Helps Searchers Find Missing Snowmobiler's Body In B.C.

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Interest Rate As Ottawa Preps For Fiscal Boost

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Interest Rate As Ottawa Preps For Fiscal Boost
    The Bank of Canada is sticking with its key interest rate as it awaits billions in economy-boosting measures expected in the upcoming federal budget.

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Interest Rate As Ottawa Preps For Fiscal Boost

    Vicki Huntington, B.C. Politician Says Tests Found High Lead Levels In Water At Legislature

    Vicki Huntington said Tuesday she decided to test the drinking water after complaints about its quality from staff and recent reports of elevated lead levels in northern B.C. schools.

    Vicki Huntington, B.C. Politician Says Tests Found High Lead Levels In Water At Legislature

    Udderly Amazing: Cow Gives Birth To 4 Healthy Calves In Southeast Saskatchewan

    Udderly Amazing: Cow Gives Birth To 4 Healthy Calves In Southeast Saskatchewan
    The calves — two boys and two girls weighing about 23 kilograms each — were born Friday on the farm near Alida.

    Udderly Amazing: Cow Gives Birth To 4 Healthy Calves In Southeast Saskatchewan

    Woman's Obituary Says No Flowers, Asks For Letters To Politicians Instead

    Woman's Obituary Says No Flowers, Asks For Letters To Politicians Instead
    An 89-year-old Winnipeg diabetic who had recently been diagnosed with stage four breast cancer has chosen to end her life by refusing to take her insulin.

    Woman's Obituary Says No Flowers, Asks For Letters To Politicians Instead