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Lifelong Friendships, Bright Futures Ended in Jet’s Crash

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Many were friends, brought together by a group of talented young men who had met as kids and over the years continued to play together as adults. The men had invited relatives, girlfriends and colleagues for a birthday celebration and ski weekend in the Rocky Mountains.

On Friday, relatives and friends of the 18 people who died when their chartered Gulfstream III crashed near Aspen struggled with their loss.

Among the 15 passengers were an award-winning young filmmaker, a talented assignment editor and a research assistant for KTTV Channel 11 News. The plane’s crew--two pilots and a flight attendant--also died.

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The group was said to be celebrating the birthday of Mario Aguilar, a young actor and businessman. He died along with his siblings, Joe and Joey Aguilar, as well as their mother and an aunt, said a relative of Joe’s girlfriend, Elena Bernal. Bernal also was killed in the crash.

At KTTV News, employees tried to cover the story even as they mourned their colleagues, assignment editor Mirweis “Mir” Tukhi, 26, and Marissa Witham, 22, a production assistant.

In Buena Park, a weeping Jawad Tukhi, 28, said his brother “died with 10 of his best friends from kindergarten.”

According to accounts from several relatives, many of the young men had attended Bancroft Junior High in Hollywood. They stayed close over the years as they went off to college and began working, said friends and family.

The core group--Tukhi, Mario Aguilar, Ivan Garcia and Eugene Kaplansky, 26--had taken other vacations together, including a ski trip last year to Colorado, relatives said.

The plane was chartered by Robert Neu, a financier and friend of the group, which included 23-year-old filmmaker Ori Greenberg. Neu was a potential investor in a production company Greenberg had formed with his father, said a friend of Greenberg.

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“You talk about your cigar-chomping, arrogant Hollywood types. These kids were anything but,” said Victoria Greenberg, Ori’s mother. “They were so centered and solid, and they had their heads on straight. They were the new breed.”

Here are sketches of some of the victims:

* Greenberg graduated from Orange County’s Chapman University in December. Three months into his professional life, friends said, he was already on the fast track.

Greenberg grew up in Malibu. His father, George Greenberg, is president of Vanguard Media Corp. Young Greenberg had worked as a production assistant for Hollywood mogul Jerry Bruckheimer. At the Moxie!/Santa Monica International Film Festival in February, Greenberg won a directing award for a short film about a homeless woman.

“I think Ori would have made it big in filmmaking,” said Harry Cheney, a former teacher at Chapman.

Greenberg had caught the attention of the production company Ifilm while doing production work there. The company eventually hired him to produce an episode scheduled to air April 9 for a new cable series on the Independent Film Channel.

Greenberg, who lived in Hermosa Beach, was a fan of big-budget action movies and had a script ready for such a project, titled “Underground,” his mother said.

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Greenberg’s girlfriend, Elizabeth Ann Smith, who had moved from Seattle to Hollywood, also was killed in the crash. “They were deeply in love and had everything in the world to look forward to,” Victoria Greenberg said.

Greg Favro of Burbank said Smith, his cousin, had been dating Greenberg for about two years. Smith, 21, worked at retailer Fred Segal in Los Angeles and in Santa Monica. He said Smith often helped Ori with his films, especially with costume design.

* Mir Tukhi was a 1998 graduate of Chapman University. He received the university’s Chris Harris Award, which recognizes the school’s best broadcast journalism student. A year later, he was part of a team nominated for a local Emmy for a story about former astronaut John Glenn.

Pete Weitzner, one of Tukhi’s professors at Chapman, said Tukhi was a mature, confident man who handled the pressure of the news business with grace.

Tukhi’s dream was to work in front of the camera as a reporter. “He was torn,” Weitzner said. “He wanted to be on the air, but he was doing so well behind the scenes.”

Outside the Buena Park home where Tukhi lived with his parents, originally from Afghanistan, and two brothers, relatives gathered Friday, crying and embracing one another.

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“We collected Superman memorabilia,” his younger brother, Faheem, 19, said. “He was my Superman. He taught me everything I know. I lived for him.”

* Marissa Witham, originally from Hayward, graduated magna cum laude from UCLA last June, and wanted to be a TV newscaster. Like Tukhi, she interned at the station before being hired to work full time.

Witham’s father, Lyle Witham of Hayward--a retired airline pilot--said he and his wife, Laurece, had checked into the background of the charter company and the type of plane before giving consent for the Aspen trip.

The company has a good record, he said, and “the Gulfstream III and IVs are the Cadillacs of the industry. . . . They should have been very, very safe.”

Witham’s parents said they would join her KTTV colleagues in planning a memorial service for Marissa, who was active in student government, sports and the arts at her high school.

* Elena Bernal, 29, of El Monte, was making her first trip to Aspen to snowboard, a sport she loved, said her older sister, Nora Bernal. She was traveling with her boyfriend, Joe Aguilar, whose two brothers and mother, Maria Valanzuela, and aunt reportedly perished.

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Elena Bernal was the youngest of seven children, her sister said, and grew up in El Monte. She worked at an office job in Pasadena while studying photography part-time at Pasadena City College. She had recently moved back home with her parents.

“She was always a riot,” Nora Bernal said. “Her laughter was infectious. She could not step into a room without doing a little dance.”

* Eugene Kaplansky, 26, had been planning the trip to Aspen with his friends for more than a month, according to his brother, Roman.

Kaplansky said Eugene recently joined a West Los Angeles accounting firm and had passed the first part of the exam to become a certified public accountant.

The Kaplansky family emigrated from Russia more than 20 years ago. They lived in New York for six years before moving to California.

“He was a bighearted guy,” said Roman Kaplansky. “He was very smart and did very well in school.”

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Roman said the group “was a great bunch of guys. . . . They really cared about each other and stuck together.”

Neu and Mario Aguilar were partners in a business that rented exotic cars, Roman Kaplansky said.

The plane’s veteran pilot, Bob Frisbie, was a 44-year-old who grew up in El Monte, said his ex-wife, Tina Anderson of Brea. Frisbie had logged more than 10,000 hours in the air, officials of the charter company said Friday.

“He was a really good pilot,” Anderson said.

The first officer, Peter Kowalczyk of Simi Valley, had 5,500 hours of flight experience, the company said.

The flight attendant, Catherine Naranjo, was a 42-year-old snowboarding and surfing enthusiast who put her much younger friends to shame, said Casey Booher, 26, a long-time friend and roommate.

“She loved life more than anybody else I knew. I can’t possibly imagine that she died,” Booher said. “She was happy in her life. She was in love. . . . She was like my sister.”

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Booher said she has received calls from Budapest and France, where the 20-year flight attendant had made friends while working.

“She was such a fun-loving person. When she was in a room, it was impossible not to notice her,” Booher said.

*

Times staff writers Rebecca Trounson, Oscar Johnson, Hector Becerra and David Pierson contributed to this story.

More Inside

Air Tragedy: Jet that crashed near Aspen, Colo., had aborted its initial approach, sources said, A14

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Crash Victims

Names of those killed aboard the Gulfstream III charter that crashed in Colorado and their ages and hometowns, if known.

1. Robert Neu

2. Mario Aguilar

3. Joe Aguilar

4. Joey Aguilar

5. Elena Bernal, 29, El Monte

6. Mirweis Tukhi, 26, Buena Park

7. Eugene Kaplansky, 26, Hollywood

8. Ivan Garcia

9. Danielle Bacon

10. Ori Greenberg, 23, Hermosa Beach

11. Elizabeth Ann Smith, 21, Hollywood

12. Maria Valanzuela

13. Romano Cota

14. Paul Stanifer

15. Marissa Witham, 22, Brentwood

16. Bob Frisbie (crew), 44

17. Peter Kowalczyk (crew),

Simi Valley

18. Catherine Naranjo (crew)

*

Source: Associated Press/Los Angeles Times

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