Thursday, 10 September 2020

Three Air National Guard members are killed in plane crash near Tennessee airport during a 'day of fun' they had scheduled off

Three people killed in a small plane crash near a Tennessee airport were Air National Guard members, officials said Wednesday.
The Federal Aviation Administration said the three were aboard a single-engine Piper PA-28 airplane that crashed Tuesday near Warren County Memorial Airport in McMinnville, southeast of Nashville.
Killed in the crash were Lt. Col. Shelli Huether, Capt. Jessica Wright, and Senior Master Sgt. Scott Bumpus, the guard said in a news release.
Investigators examine a single-engine Piper that crashed in a field off Airport Lake Road on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2020, near Warren County Memorial Airport in McMinnville, Tenn. All three occupants were killed
Investigators examine a single-engine Piper that crashed in a field off Airport Lake Road on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2020, near Warren County Memorial Airport in McMinnville, Tenn. All three occupants were killed
Shelli Huether
Jessica Wright
Scott Bumpus
Killed in the crash were Lt. Col. Shelli Huether, Capt. Jessica Wright, and Senior Master Sgt. Scott Bumpus, the guard said in a news release.
They were members of the 118th Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance Group. Heuther was director of operations for the 118th Intelligence Support Squadron, and Wright was assistant director of operations for the same unit, said Maj. Danielle Parton, a spokeswoman for the 118th Wing.
Bumpus was chief of current operations for the 236th Intelligence Squadron, Parton said.

All three lived in Middle Tennessee. They had a scheduled day off and were planning to have some fun, Parton said.
The plane took off from the airport and crashed in a nearby field, National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Peter Knudson said. A witness told investigators that the plane appeared to be trying to return to the airport when it crashed.
The plane took off from the Warren County Memorial Airport and crashed in a nearby field
The plane took off from the Warren County Memorial Airport and crashed in a nearby field
A witness told investigators that the plane appeared to be trying to return to the airport when it crashed
A witness told investigators that the plane appeared to be trying to return to the airport when it crashed
It was not immediately clear who was flying the plane, Parton said.
'Words cannot begin to explain the shock, grief, pain and dismay we feel having lost three remarkable members of our Guard family,' said Col. Todd Wiles, commander of the 118th Wing. 'All three were dedicated to the service of our nation.'
Warren County Sheriff Tommy Myers told the Southern Standard earlier that the crash victims were members of the military and didn´t live in town.
Jerry Wiser was mowing his field when he heard a loud crash behind him.
'When I turned around there was a plane sitting right behind me,' he said.
Wiser and another person nearby called authorities and rushed to the smoking wreckage to try to help, he said.

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