Search for Small Plane Lost on Radar Near North Carolina Airport Continues

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
October 21, 2019US News
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Search for Small Plane Lost on Radar Near North Carolina Airport Continues
Rescuers from 12 state and local agencies searching in and around William B. Umstead State Park. (Screenshot/Google Maps)

A search for a small plane continues in a densely forested state park near Raleigh-Durham International Airport, where air traffic controllers lost contact with the aircraft as it prepared to land.

A statement posted on the airport’s website on Oct. 21 said a North Carolina highway patrol helicopter was scanning the park for heat signatures consistent with a crash landing.

Rescuers from 12 state and local agencies searching in and around William B. Umstead State Park, an approximately 6,000-acre (2,400-hectare) wooded expanse bounded by an interstate, the airport and a state highway.

“It could take a very long time for us to find this plane,” airport spokeswoman Crystal Feldman said shortly before midnight: “No one is going home until this plane is found.”

The Federal Aviation Administration radar lost track of the Piper PA32 at about 7:25 p.m. Sunday as it approached Runway 32, the smallest of three landing strips and perpendicular to what the airport considers its primary runway. Air operations were halted for about 20 minutes as firefighting and rescue units rushed to the wooded area, but the plane could not be located.

The FAA website said the single-engine plane typically has around six seats. Feldman couldn’t say how many people were aboard the private aircraft.

The airport authority’s president and CEO, Michael Landguth, described the state park as having “few roads and little to no light.” He called recovery efforts in remote areas “extremely challenging.”

US Coast Guard Suspends Search for Pilot in Gulf of Mexico

The U.S. Coast Guard has called off a search in the Gulf of Mexico for a pilot who flew a small aircraft hundreds of miles beyond its intended destination in Louisiana.

The search for 63-year-old Steven Stone Schumacher was suspended on Oct. 20.

Officials said his family reported him missing on Wednesday night after he failed to arrive in Gonzales, Louisiana, from Missouri.

A Coast Guard statement released Sunday said U.S. crews and the Mexican Navy spent about 21 hours searching for his Piper Aztec. The agency previously stated the plane’s last known position was about 440 miles off Louisiana’s coast flying about 50 feet above water.

Schumacher worked as a surgeon in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and graduated from LSU.

Officials haven’t said what they think happened.

By Jonathan Drew

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