Hundreds of Juneau residents turnout Friday, Feb. 1, 2019, in 8-degree weather for a candlelight vigil at Mayor Bill Overstreet Park for the Guardian medical flight crew that lost their lives in a plane crash this week. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire File)

Hundreds of Juneau residents turnout Friday, Feb. 1, 2019, in 8-degree weather for a candlelight vigil at Mayor Bill Overstreet Park for the Guardian medical flight crew that lost their lives in a plane crash this week. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire File)

Update: Searchers discover most of Guardian airplane

Company said it continues its search for the bodies of those missing

  • By RACHEL D’ORO ASSOCIATED PRESS
  • Tuesday, March 19, 2019 5:12pm
  • NewsLocal News

Update, 4 p.m.

Searchers have found most of the Guardian Flight plane that went missing Jan. 29, according to a news release from Guardian Flight on Tuesday.

The search team estimated that it had found between 85 and 90 percent of the plane dispersed over a large area. The parts found include the fuselage, tail assembly, the second engine, landing gear, propeller blades and other wing parts, Guardian stated in its release.

They plan on recovering these parts and giving them to National Transportation Safety Board investigators to try and determine what went wrong on that flight from Anchorage to Kake.

“The families of our beloved crew members have been notified of these latest developments,” Guardian Flight’s Randy Lyman said in the release. “We are hopeful that we will be able to recover their loved ones to aid them and the entire Guardian Flight team in grieving this tremendous loss.”

— — — Original article, Tuesday morning — — —

Searchers have recovered the cockpit voice recorder and found other parts of an air ambulance that disappeared in Alaska with three people on board in January, the owners of the aircraft said Tuesday.

A landing gear and engine of the King Air 200 also were located in the same waters of Frederick Sound, Guardian Flight said in an initial release. The company later said an underwater search team located additional aircraft parts on Tuesday, including the tail assembly, fragmented fuselage, propeller blades and wing fragments.

Searchers estimate they found as much as 90 percent of the plane scattered over a large debris field in the waters of Frederick Sound, according to the Utah-based company. Guardian Flight said it plans to recover major pieces that could be useful in the investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.

[Photos: Hundreds turn out for Guardian Flight vigil]

Clint Johnson, the NTSB’s Alaska chief, said options are being looked at for recovering airplane debris, but added plans have not been finalized.

“This is a work in progress,” he said.

An NTSB investigator was on board the recovery boat when the plane’s black box recorder was recovered Monday evening, and has possession of the black box, also known as a cockpit voice recorder, according to Johnson.

Guardian Flight said it continues its search for the bodies of the three people who disappeared Jan. 29 flying to pick up a patient in the southeast community of Kake.

[Search team locates what is believed to be part of missing medevac plane]

Pilot Patrick Coyle, flight nurse Stacie Rae Morse and flight paramedic Margaret Langston were Guardian Flight employees based in Juneau. Morse was pregnant with a child she planned to name Delta Rae.

“The families of our beloved crew members have been notified of these latest developments. We are hopeful that we will be able to recover their loved ones to aid them and the entire Guardian Flight team in grieving this tremendous loss,” Randy Lyman, the company’s operations vice president, wrote in a news release..

The Coast Guard searched hundreds of square miles (kilometers) before suspending the search Jan. 31.

An aircraft wing and other debris were found at the search site about 22 miles (35 kilometers) west of Kake near the last known position of the plane. Guardian Flight officials say they believe it was the missing plane.

The company initially grounded all of its 85 aircraft across the U.S. as a show of respect for the missing. It gradually re-started operations with aircraft based outside of Alaska.


• This is an Associated Press report by Rachel D’Oro.


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