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NBC Sports Chairman Dick Ebersol survives plane crash in CO

Posted: Sun Nov 28, 2004 4:39 pm
by Brent
Jet crashes at Montrose Regional Airport
Dan Werner (Web producer)

Created: 11/28/2004 11:25 AM MST
Updated: 11/28/2004 2:35 PM MST

MONTROSE - A charter jet carrying six people to South Bend, Ind., crashed Sunday morning on takeoff, killing three people and seriously injuring two others near the Montrose Regional Airport, which serves the Telluride Ski Area.

Allen Kenitzer, regional Federal Aviation Administration spokesman, said the pilot, flight attendant and one passenger died when the plane burst into flames after crashing through a fence.

Two other passengers suffered life-threatening injuries. The sixth person listed on the plane's manifest had not been found.

Kenitzer identified the plane as a CL-60 Challenger owned and operated by Global Aviation of Los Angeles, a charter service company. There was snow in the area but Kenitzer said he did not know if it was a factor.

Investigators from the FAA and National Safety Transportation Board were en route to the airport, 185 miles southwest of Denver.

Posted: Sun Nov 28, 2004 6:17 pm
by Brent
Dick Ebersol's jet crashes at Montrose Regional Airport
Dan Werner (Web producer)

Created: 11/28/2004 11:25 AM MST
Updated: 11/28/2004 3:56 PM MST


MONTROSE - NBC Sports Chairman and President Dick Ebersol was in a jet that crashed Sunday morning on takeoff, killing at least two people and seriously injuring two others near the Montrose Regional Airport, which serves the Telluride Ski Area. Ebersol survived the crash and his wife, Susan Saint James, was not on board.

Allen Kenitzer, regional Federal Aviation Administration spokesman, said the pilot, flight attendant and one passenger died when the plane burst into flames after crashing through a fence. Sheriff's officials only confirm two of the deaths. The jet reportedly was headed to South Bend, Ind.

Two other passengers suffered life-threatening injuries. The sixth person listed on the plane's manifest had not been found.

Kenitzer identified the plane as a CL-60 Challenger owned and operated by Global Aviation of Los Angeles, a charter service company. There was snow in the area but Kenitzer said he did not know if it was a factor.

Investigators from the FAA and National Safety Transportation Board were en route to the airport, 185 miles southwest of Denver.

Posted: Sun Nov 28, 2004 8:52 pm
by TazzyD

Posted: Sun Nov 28, 2004 9:06 pm
by nystate
Bad year for the CRJ series. First the NWA/Pinnacle CRJ-200 crash, then the Chinese CRJ crash, now this...

My thoughts and prayers are with the friends and family of those involved. Hopefully the injured will make a speedy recovery.

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 12:01 am
by Wnghs2007
Im glad he survived. I hope is son did. But he is missing. I feel sorry for the people and there families that died in the crash.

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 10:11 am
by Brent
http://apnews.excite.com/article/20.../D86LGT7O0.html

NBC Exec Dick Ebersol Survives Jet Crash

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AP) - NBC Sports chairman Dick Ebersol and his college-aged son emerged from the fiery wreckage of a corporate jet after it crashed during takeoff and burst into flames, killing two crew members. Rescuers were still searching for Ebersol's younger son, whose seat was missing from the smoldering ruins. :crazyeyes:

The 18-seat charter jet with six people on board crashed Sunday morning at Montrose Regional Airport in southwest Colorado, not far from the Telluride Ski Area. A heavy snowstorm had lightened up before the plane prepared to depart for South Bend, Ind., where Ebersol's son Charles is a senior at the University of Notre Dame.

A witness said the impact ripped the cockpit from the fuselage, and that Charles Ebersol helped his 57-year-old father to safety through the front of the plane.

A second son, 14-year-old Edward, was missing, Denver NBC affiliate KUSA-TV reported. The station said crews searched by helicopter and on the ground, but that even "Teddy" Ebersol's plane seat could not be found. A Montrose County Sheriff's spokeswoman said the boy had not been located by late Sunday.

The sheriff's office also said two people were killed in the crash, though their identities were not released. KUSA said the victims were the pilot and co-pilot. Hospital officials said three men were treated after the crash. Federal officials said the aircraft also had a flight attendant on board.

Ebersol's wife, actress Susan Saint James, was not on the plane, the station said. The family lives in Connecticut.

Eyewitness Chuck Distel told The Associated Press by phone that he was driving on a highway parallel to the runway when he saw the plane skid sideways through a fence and brush before hitting a roadway that ripped the cockpit from the fuselage, leaving it an unrecognizable wreck. The Denver Post reported that the jet lifted off briefly before crashing.

Distel said Charles helped his father through the front of the plane and that the pair were walking around outside the wreckage as Distel and an airport official arrived. He said Ebersol didn't say a word as the younger man cried and yelled "Oh my God! Oh my God!"

"I had to think for a second, 'who are these people?'" he said. "They weren't severely injured, they were in shock." Distel said Charles was able to climb into an ambulance, while the elder Ebersol was loaded onto a stretcher.

The airport official yelled into the wreckage for survivors, but heard none. The wreckage left a burning trail of jet fuel and burst into flames, forcing Distel and other rescuers to get away.

Linda McCool, a nursing supervisor at Montrose Memorial Hospital, said three men were taken to the hospital after the crash and later transferred to other hospitals. Dan Prinster, vice president of St. Mary's Hospital in Grand Junction, said two people were moved there from Montrose Memorial and another patient was being flown to a burn unit in Denver. Neither McCool nor Prinster would release any other information on the survivors.

A weekend storm that covered most of the state dumped more than 3 feet of snow in the Montrose area and Distel said there was light snow and fog at the time of the crash. It was not known if weather was a factor and investigators from the FAA and National Safety Transportation Board were en route to the airport, 185 miles southwest of Denver.

The Montrose airport is one of several that serves Telluride, a popular ski destination for celebrities.

The plane was identified as a CL-602 Challenger, which could hold up to 19 passengers, registered to Jet Alliance of Millville, N.J. The company offered its condolences in a statement, but said it had no additional information.

Known as a television innovator, Ebersol has a long history at NBC.

He became the network's director of late-night programming in 1974 replaced Lorne Michaels for a rocky tenure as executive producer of "Saturday Night Live" in the early 1980s. Ebersol, of Litchfield, Conn., became president of NBC Sports in 1989 and recently signed a contract that keeps him at the network through 2012.

Ebersol is best-known for his love affair with the Olympics. A protege of Olympics-coverage pioneer Roone Arledge, he worked as an ABC researcher at the 1968 Grenoble Winter Games and carried on Arledge's philosophy of presenting the Olympics through storytelling, rather than emphasizing results.

"He is very innovative," Fox Sports chairman David Hill said Sunday. "He's obviously a great leader and, from my perspective, a very worthy competitor."

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 1:21 pm
by southerngale
I hope they find their son soon...this is just too sad. Father and son walk away from this tragedy and they can't even find the other boy or the seat he was in. :(

Image
Actress Susan St. James, her husband, NBC Sports chairman Dick Ebersol, and their son, Edward, arrive for a private screening of Mean Girls at the Loews Lincoln Square Theater in New York, in this April 23, 2004 photo. Ebersol and his college-aged son, Charles, emerged from the fiery wreckage of a corporate jet after it crashed during takeoff and burst into flames, killing two crew members, Sunday morning Nov. 28, 2004 at Montrose Regional Airport in southwest Colorado. Rescuers were still searching for Ebersol's younger son, Edward, whose seat was missing from the smoldering ruins. (AP Photo/Jennifer Graylock)

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 10:15 pm
by TazzyD
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=s ... /jet_crash

The article has been updated and they are now saying they found a body that fits the boys description under the wreckage.

This is very, very sad. I feel horrible for the family. :(

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 10:21 pm
by Wnghs2007
TazzyD wrote:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&e=5&u=/ap/20041130/ap_on_re_us/jet_crash

The article has been updated and they are now saying they found a body that fits the boys description under the wreckage.

This is very, very sad. I feel horrible for the family. :(


:cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: That is so horrible :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 11:49 pm
by Skywatch_NC
:( :( :( :( :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:

Prayers and thoughts go out to them and others who lost loved ones and for those injured in that crash!

Eric

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 11:52 pm
by Wnghs2007
Skywatch_NC wrote::( :( :( :( :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:

Prayers and thoughts go out to them and others who lost loved ones and for those injured in that crash!

Eric


Yes, heres prayers to the family :(

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 11:56 pm
by Skywatch_NC
Do the investigators know what may have happened? Taking off in a snowstorm...wonder if the wings had been de-iced? If that was the case...that's what caused an Air Florida Flight 90 crash into the Potomac River in January 1982. :( :cry:

Eric

Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2004 11:58 pm
by Wnghs2007
Skywatch_NC wrote:Do the investigators know what may have happened? Taking off in a snowstorm...wonder if the wings had been de-iced? If that was the case...that's what caused an Air Florida Flight 90 crash into the Potomac River in January 1982. :( :cry:

Eric


I thought I heard somewhere that it had nothing to do with the weather but I dont know.

Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2004 8:51 am
by Brent
There are reports the wings were NOT de-iced, which if true, was the cause. A Plane can't fly if the wings are weighted down by ice.