Three killed in Tooele County plane crash

Published: Sunday, April 26 2009 12:00 a.m. MDT

John Welch from Stockton, Utah, looks at the wreckage of a plane that crashed near town Saturday.

Keith Johnson, Deseret News

STOCKTON, Tooele County — Three men died Saturday when a firefighting plane crashed near Stockton.

All three people onboard — pilot Tom Risk, 66, of Littleton, Colo., and crew members Mike Flynn, 59, of Alamogordo, N.M., and Brian Buss, 32, Alberton, Mont. — were killed, the Tooele County Sheriff's Office reported.

The plane went down around 10 a.m. about one mile east of the Stockton Pass in the Oquirrh Mountains.

The crew members for Neptune Aviation of Missoula, Mont., were bound for southern New Mexico to help fight a 19,000-acre wildfire, said Dan Ware, a spokesman for the New Mexico Forestry Division.

"While we must pause to mourn their loss, within the wildland community we must also honor them by continuing to fight fires to protect our communities," state forester Arthur Blazer said.

The wildfire, 20 percent contained, was threatening a home, several outbuildings and a power distribution line, officials said.

Neptune's ground safety and security coordinator, Miek Pfau, said he could confirm only that the company lost an aircraft.

"The fire aviation community lost good people and a valuable resource today and they will be missed," said Jennifer Myslivy, a New Mexico-based fire mitigation and education specialist for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.

Tooele County Search and Rescue crews began looking for a possible downed plane near Stockton after a local resident reported hearing a low-flying plane followed by what sounded like a crash, according to Sheriff Frank Park.

Initially, the search was hampered by low visibility due to low clouds and rain.

About 11:15 a.m., the sheriff's office learned through sources in Idaho that an airplane was reported missing. The plane had departed from Missoula, Mont., and had been headed for Alamogordo, N.M. Deputies say the men were transporting the plane from Missoula to Alamogordo.

About 1 p.m., the clouds lifted and the crash site became visible. The debris field was more than 150 yards long, Park said. About that same time, searchers confirmed the plane was the one reported missing.

Search-and-rescue teams had been conducting training exercises at the Five Mile Pass area southwest of Stockton. They used off-road vehicles to reach the crash site, Park said.

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