ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Alaska 
emergency crews will attempt Friday to recover the remains of eight 
cruise ship passengers and a pilot who were killed when their 
sightseeing plane crashed in a remote and rugged area of southeastern 
Alaska.
Wind and rain 
prevented any recovery after the wreckage of the aircraft was found 
Thursday against a granite rock face, 800 feet above a lake.
There
 was no immediate indication of why the DeHavilland DHC-3 Otter 
turboprop went down, killing the nine people during the sightseeing 
excursion. No names have been released.
Clint
 Johnson, head of the National Transportation Safety Board's Alaska 
office, said it was too soon to know circumstances of the crash, 
including whether the plane flew into the cliff.
The
 NTSB was assembling a high-level team to investigate the crash, 
including three members from Alaska and at least two people from 
Washington, D.C.
"The initial
 rescue crew that went in had a very tough time because of the terrain,"
 Johnson said. "It's a very steep, mountainous area, and weather 
conditions caused them to stand down."
He earlier confirmed the deaths: "''We have nine fatalities."
Coast
 Guard Petty Officer Lauren Steenson said the agency received a report 
around 2:15 p.m. that the plane was overdue. Troopers said an emergency 
locator transmitter activated in the Misty Fjords National Monument, and
 a helicopter pilot spotted the downed aircraft above Ella Lake, about 
800 miles southeast of Anchorage.
Promech
 Air, an airline based in Ketchikan, operated the shore excursion sold 
through Holland America Line, the cruise ship company said in a 
statement. The eight passengers were guests on the Westerdam, which is 
on a seven-day cruise that departed Seattle on Saturday.
"We
 are incredibly distressed by this situation, and our thoughts and 
prayers are with those onboard the plane and their families," the 
statement said. "Holland America Line is extending its full support to 
traveling companions of the guests involved."
Promech said that the crash happened about 11:20 a.m., and the plane was one of five Otter aircraft in its fleet.
"There
 is nothing I can say that can alleviate the pain and overwhelming sense
 of loss that we and the loved ones of those affected are feeling," 
Marcus Sessoms, president of Promech Air, said in a statement. "At this 
moment, all of us share the pain and anguish of this terrible event.  
Our thoughts and our prayers go out to everyone touched by this 
tragedy."
The Ketchikan Daily
 News reported the Westerdam had been scheduled to leave the city at 1 
p.m., but it remained in port Thursday evening.
The airline's website advertises tours of the 2-million-acre Misty Fjord National Monument in its float planes.
"Towering
 granite cliffs, 1,000-foot waterfalls, lush and remote valleys and 
serene crystalline lakes make up this incredible landscape," it says
___
Associated Press writer Kathy McCarthy in Seattle contributed to this report.

0 comments:
Post a Comment