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A day after sky-diving crash, April fatality is scrutinized
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Jeff Libby
Sentinel Staff Writer
October 5, 2005
DeLAND -- A day after a plane carrying 10 international sky divers
crashed
during take-off at DeLand Airport, officials for the State Attorney's
Office
said they are reviewing another serious accident at the airport earlier
this
year for possible criminal charges.
The State Attorney's Office would not give further details on the
charges
being considered in the fatal midair collision between a sky diver and
an
airplane in April.
But DeLand police confirmed that the target of the criminal probe is
the
pilot, William Buchmann of DeLand.
"That's where the focus is, on the individual pilot," said Cmdr. Randel
Henderson, police spokesman.
Buchmann could not immediately be reached for comment.
DeLand police also released the names Tuesday of the sky divers and
pilot
involved in Monday's crash. Only the pilot and two of the parachute
jumpers
remained hospitalized Tuesday night.
Shannon Gray Lane, 37, of DeLand, the pilot of the aircraft, was in
serious
but stable condition, an improvement from the previous day, hospital
officials in Daytona Beach said. Lane had been admitted at Halifax
Medical
Center in critical condition.
A jumper from Brazil, listed by police as Kristian Gomes, 32, remained
hospitalized in fair condition at Halifax.
At Florida Hospital DeLand, Jean-Pol Lintelo, 45, of Spain, listed in
good
condition, was recovering from an ankle fracture, hospital officials
said.
Three other sky divers from Spain were treated and released from the
DeLand
hospital on Monday for minor injuries: Francisco Mejia, 30; Juan Maria
Castillo, 27; and Alberto Gonzales, 25.
Marco Oliveira, 34, also of Brazil, was released Tuesday from Halifax
Hospital.
Sky divers who refused treatment after the crash included Nikolai
Eliasson,
45, of DeLand, Thomas Hayes, 52, of Denmark, Ryan Miller, 19, of
Daytona
Beach and Vicente Rosell, 27, of Spain.
The crash during takeoff of the Pilatus Porter single-engine turbine
plane
Monday was the third serious sky-diving accident at DeLand Airport this
year.
Witnesses said the plane reached an altitude of about 50 feet before
banking
hard to the left and crashing to the ground. A witness who called 911
reported seeing smoke after the crash, but no fire, according to tape
recordings released by the Volusia County Sheriff's Office on Tuesday.
Sky-diving photographer Albert "Gus" Wing III, 50, of Longwood died in
the
April collision.
In January, Jan Kadic, a 28-year-old Czech parachutist, died from
injuries
sustained during a hard landing.
Lane, the pilot in Monday's crash, has a clean flying record, according
to
Federal Aviation Administration officials.
Jeff Libby can be reached at
jlibby@orlandosentinel.com or
386-253-2316.
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