Illinois State Athletic Trainers Among 7 Dead In Plane Crash
BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (AP) - A private plane returning
from the NCAA basketball tournament in Indianapolis crashed in a central
Illinois field on Tuesday, killing all seven people on board, including Illinois
State University's associate head basketball coach and a deputy athletics
director.
Rescue personnel found no survivors at the site near the city
of Bloomington, and a coroner pronounced the seven occupants dead, McLean County
Sheriff Jon Sandage said at a news conference. The plane went down in a soybean
field 2 1/2 miles from the Bloomington airport.
All seven victims, who
were found strapped in their seats, died from blunt force trauma resulting from
the crash, said Coroner Kathleen Davis.
The journey to Monday night's
championship game began with a phone conversation. Scott Bittner, a 42-year-old
business owner, got a call from sports bar owner Terry Stralow, 64, asking if he
wanted to go to the game.
"He said he had an extra ticket and asked him
to go," said Terry Wertz, who worked alongside Bittner at a meat processing
plant. Wertz said that when Bittner hung up the phone he was "really
excited."
They took off for the game in a plane that Bittner used
regularly for business trips, owned by his father. It was not clear exactly how
they were connected with the others on board, but local broadcasters talked
about the group as if many of them were well acquainted with one
another.
Bittner and Stralow were two of the seven
killed.
Illinois State University President Larry Dietz confirmed in an
email to students, faculty and staff that associate head basketball coach Torrey
Ward, 36, and Aaron Leetch, 37, the athletic department's deputy director for
external relations, also were killed in the early-morning crash. The email was
released to media.
"Words cannot fully express the grief that is felt in
the wake of such a tragedy," Dietz wrote, adding that both men were
well-respected and much-loved in the athletics department. "We move between
shock and profound sadness."
Several players and staff carried through
with an optional practice Tuesday afternoon at Redbird Arena. A spokesman said
they would not make players or coaches available for comment.
The
Cessna 414 twin-engine aircraft took off from Indianapolis and
crashed just short of the Central Illinois Regional Airport in Bloomington after
midnight, the Federal Aviation Administration said.
The National
Transportation Safety Board was investigating, but there was no initial word on
the cause of the crash. News photos from near the scene showed dense fog.
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