Teenage Pilot Dies in Plane Crash During Around-the-World Flight Attempt

July 28, 2014 at 10:07 AM
Teenage Pilot Dies in Plane Crash During Around-the-World Flight Attempt
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Indiana teenager Haris Suleman died on Wednesday when his plane crashed into the Pacific Ocean.

The 17-year-old was attempting to fly around the world in 30 days and set a record as the youngest pilot to do so in the shortest amount of time.

The plane went down shortly after leaving Pago Pago in American Samoa Tuesday night. Suleman and his father, Babar Suleman, were on board.

Suleman's last tweet: "Pago Pago is without a doubt top 5 places I've been this summer :)"

Writing on Facebook, where the duo had documented the journey in a group called Fly Around the World in 30 Days, a family member listed as a group admin on a Facebook group dedicated to tracking the flight confirmed that the boy's body had been found but the father's body remained missing.

"Haris has been found — he did not make it," Hiba Suleman writes. "My father has not yet been found. Please pray that my dad is found alive and well. Also, hug your siblings and parents — tell them you love them, a hundred time. A thousand times. It will never feel like it's been said quite often enough."

 


A spokesperson for the group, Eddie Gold, said the cause of the crash remains unknown in a post pinned to the top of its page.

"There is no indication as to why the crash happened except that the crash site was about 1 mile from the end of the runway and out to sea," Gold writes.

"It was obviously very dark and the airport was uncontrolled. It is very unlikely they had reached an altitude that enabled them to contact the ATC [Air Traffic Control] on Samoa. The area is in the New Zealand SAR [Search and Rescue] region and it was New Zealand SAR that received a distress signal from the aircraft. The timing of the signal (possibly a satellite ping) put it very close to the crash site when transmitted."

 


Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor in Los Angeles said the single-engine Hawker Beechcraft plane crashed into the ocean Tuesday night under unknown circumstances. The tail number provided by the FAA shows the plane is registered to a limited liability corporation whose address matches Babar Suleman's home address in Plainfield, Indiana, west of Indianapolis.

The NTSB tweeted that it was investigating the crash.
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