Advertisement

Plane Headed to John Wayne Crashes; 4 Killed

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Four people, two of them from Orange County, died Sunday morning when a private plane returning from Las Vegas to its base at John Wayne Airport crashed in San Bernardino County, authorities said.

The two men and two women were killed when the twin-engine plane crashed in turbulent weather in a remote area about 50 miles southeast of Barstow.

According to the Associated Press, the victims were identified as Lewis Kariolich, 55, and his wife Anitma, both of Des Plains, Ill.; their daughter, Cynthia Kariolich, 25, of Orange County, who was piloting the plane; and her friend, Stefan Meister, 25, also from Orange County.

Advertisement

They apparently were returning from a weekend trip to Las Vegas.

The aircraft was identified as a Piper Aztec with tail number N-2377T. A plane matching that description is registered to Command Aviation, a flight school based at John Wayne Airport.

Dave Carsel, assistant flight instructor for Command Aviation, confirmed that a plane with that tail number is registered to his company, which sometimes rents aircraft to its instructors.

He was unable late Sunday to confirm if the company had lost a plane or if the Piper Aztec with that registration number had been flown to Las Vegas.

“I have no idea,” he said. “All I know is that is a Command Aviation aircraft. . . . Hopefully, [the plane that crashed] is not our plane. Hopefully, it is no one I know.”

Deputy Andy Avery of the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department said witnesses reported the plane “went into a tailspin” and crashed at 10:46 a.m. in a fireball on a dry lake bed northeast of Lucerne Valley and east of Highway 247.

“It appears from receipts and other material that they landed in Vegas on Friday and headed back to Orange County today,” Avery said.

Advertisement

The plane filed no flight plan before taking off Sunday, said Jerry Acosta, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration. Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board will arrive Monday to begin an inquiry into the crash’s cause, he said.

“There was a lot of turbulence,” sheriff’s spokesman Ted Morgan said.

According to FAA records, the plane is a six-seater that is owned by P.I.C. Aircraft Leasing Corp. of Carson City, Nev. It apparently leased the plane to Command Aviation.

Command operates a flight school and rents some aircraft at John Wayne, airport spokeswoman Kathleen Chambers said.

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Details of Piper Crash

A twin-engine Piper Aztec returning to John Wayne Airport from Las Vegas crashed Sunday morning in San Bernardino County, killing four people, including an Orange County woman in her 30s.

Piper Aztec

Wing span: 37ft.

Length: 31ft.

Height: 10 ft.

Cruising speed: 206 mph.

Service ceiling: 17,600 ft.

Range: 910-1,134 miles

Source: Jane’s All the World’s Aircraft, staff reports

Advertisement