January 21, 2008
Fatal Plane Crash Kills Five, Rains Bodies and Debris on Corona Car Dealership
Two Sunday afternoon small-aircraft flights turned deadly yesterday when the planes collided mid-air over Corona, sending bodies and debris flying through the air and onto parking lots below and killing five people.
The owner of one of the planes, a Cessna 172, was not piloting the aircraft, and knew about the crash from having seen the television news. William A. Reinke from La Habra did not offer any information to the media regarding who was piloting his plane or who the passengers on board were. The second aircraft was a Cessna 150 which is listed as belonging to a company called Air Corona, Inc. in Dover, Delaware. Because the small Corona Municipal Airport does not have a staffed control tower, authorities investigating the incident are having a difficult time discerning what caused the crash that happened at about 3:35 Sunday afternoon.
Meanwhile, on the ground, investigators are sorting through the debris and wreckage that fell from the sky, landing atop vehicles, and at the Chevy Dealership, claiming one life. ABC news quotes eyewitness Hector Hernandez as he spoke with local KCBS-TV: "There were bodies falling out of the sky [...] One of them crashed into the top of a Ford Mustang, and another one fell not too far behind that one on the parking lot." Much of the smaller Cessna disseminated into several pieces after the impact, while the larger plane crashed near the Nissan dealership.
Two bodies from each of the planes have been found, but investigators will not know if there are more victims of the crash until they are able to work their way through all the wreckage.
Photo of a Cessna aircraft by BobMacInnes via Flickr



[ report this ]
Another example of LAist news outlet re-hash. This is a prime example of what I am referring to from my post on the previous blog entry.
Anyone with either a radio or a TV living in SoCal already knows about this as it has been on endless loop on the local news here since it happened...
[ report this ]
This story has been making international headlines all morning--why shouldn't we cover it?
LAist can be where local readers go to get news AND all the other cool and interesting information we bring to our readers, like killer concert reviews and photos, food write ups, political insight, interviews, tips on events, the local lit scene, and, yes, the Neighborhood Project. It would be nice to be many people's one-stop-shop.
Many people, including myself, avoid television and radio news for the very same "endless loop" reason you mentioned. You're welcome to "filter out" the news by isolating what you read by one of the other three categories listed on top, or skip over it and read an article you find more personally relevant.
But if it happens in the greater Los Angeles area, it's darn well going to happen on LAist, too. I think that seems pretty reasonable, don't you?
[ report this ]
I personally don't own a TV and so I rely on LAist for important local news. I know that I'm not going to find up-to-the-minute reports on these types of things, but I don't really need that anyway. This is the first I've heard of this story.
[ report this ]
Its raining men.
Too soon?
[ report this ]
I appreciate LAist reporting... It's the first I've heard about the story, as well. I don't watch the news all day so wouldn't hear about something like this until the newspaper told me.
[ report this ]
Like snax, I had not heard of this tragedy until finding it here on LAist.
[ report this ]
One of the victims was my tax guy. Just found out the other day when I called for my appointment. Tragic.