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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Search finds Fossett's aircraft
2008-10-03
The wreckage of the light aircraft that belonged to missing millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett has been found. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said a team had found a single-engine Bellanca Super Decathlon plane near the town of Mammoth Lakes in eastern California.

The search began after a hiker found items on Monday thought to have belonged to Fossett who disappeared on a solo flight in September 2007. Fossett, 63, had set off from Nevada for a local flight but failed to return.

The NTSB said on Thursday the wreckage, found 3,200m up the Sierra Nevada mountains, "appears to be the aircraft piloted by Steve Fossett" and that they were sending an investigator to the site.

'No human remains'
Rescuers later reached the plane on foot and confirmed it was Fossett's aircraft but found no human remains at the crash site.

John Anderson, the Madera County Sheriff, said photos of the site appeared to indicate that the plane had smashed head-on into a mountainside at high speed. "The crash looked so severe I doubt if someone would have walked away from it.

"There was no body in the plane. We have not found any human remains at the crash site," Anderson said.

Mark Rosenker, an official from the National Transportation and Safety Board, said preliminary analysis of the site indicated Fossett had died in the crash. "Information is indicative of a high-impact crash, which appears to be consistent with a non-survivable accident," he said, adding it would likely take "weeks, perhaps months" before the cause of the accident was determined.

Fossett's widow, Peggy, welcomed the discovery of her husband's plane. "I especially want to thank Preston Morrow who made this discovery and turned Steve's belongings over to the authorities.

"The uncertainty surrounding my husband's death over this past year has created a very difficult situation for me.

"I hope now to be able to bring to closure a very painful chapter in my life," she said.
Posted by:Fred

#4  My guess is that he had a heart attack, stroke or some such while flying, passed out and flew into the mountain. Too bad. The sub he was going to use to go to the bottom of the ocean (single man record attempt) sits unfinished about 100 yards from where I type this.
Posted by: remoteman   2008-10-03 14:03  

#3  Now they claim to have found enough "material" to do a DNA run. Lotsa bears around there, and I suppose they dragged him away and that's how the wallet remains were displaced from the crash site. Strange that there was no transponder on the plane. He had told someone he was searching for dry lake beds for high speed runs in Nevada. I wonder how he got over to the Sierras ? The sheriff did say he remembered that they were socked in all Labor Day weekend in 2007 with thunderstorms and low clouds. So Fossett thought he was cruising along at 9500 feet I guess. So long Steve.
Posted by: Woozle Elmeter 2700   2008-10-03 09:57  

#2  ...The local fauna could have dragged any remains some distance from the crash site.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2008-10-03 05:27  

#1  "NOT found any human remains at the crash site" > HMMMMM, well, some Net sites are reporting the contrary that remains have been found, although not yet confirmed as FOSSETT'S.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-10-03 00:21  

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