Pilot identified in fatal Alaska Range crash

The site of Saturday’s fatal plane crash on Thunder Mountain in the Alaska Range. NPS Photo

Four people are confirmed dead with a fifth unaccounted for and presumed dead after a crash in the Alaska Range on Saturday. It is the first fatal crash in the Alaska Range involving a commercial operator since 2003.

On Monday morning, the National Park Service saw a potential window to reach the site of a DeHavilland Beaver that crashed fourteen miles southwest of the summit of Denali on Saturday. Bad weather had kept rescuers away Saturday night and all day Sunday.

Katherine Belcher, Public Information Officer for Denali National Park and Preserve, says there was hope that the five people aboard the airplane might still be alive.

“We had no visual confirmation of the condition of the plane, so I would say we were hopeful for a happy outcome.”

That happy outcome was not to be, however. The rescue helicopter was able to reach the crash site

Thunder Mountain, the location of Saturday’s flightseeing plane crash in the Alaska Range. Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.

on a narrow ridge known as Thunder Mountain, and a ranger was lowered on a tether to inspect the plane. He was able to reach the downed Beaver and confirm that at least four of its occupants were dead.

“He had a very small window of space, a very small area, where he could get close enough to the plane to kind of look inside. Unfortunately, he was able to see that four of the passengers were deceased. He couldn’t actually get inside the airplane to do any sort of real investigation. He was only on the ground for about five minutes.”

With the weather closing quickly, the ranger was not able to locate the plane’s fifth occupant, but Katherine Belcher says conditions are such that the person is presumed dead as well.

“The body may still be in the plane, but we just couldn’t see. Until we get a little more time on the ground, we won’t know for certain, but we’re pretty confident that the person did not get out of the aircraft.”

On Monday afternoon, the National Park Service identified the pilot of the aircraft as Craig Layson of Saline, Michigan. The Saline Post newspaper says Layson is married with three children.

The four passengers aboard have not been identified, but were all Polish citizens according to the Park Service.

What was a search and rescue has now become a recovery effort. Katherine Belcher says park personnel are developing plans for when the weather clears.

The terrain surrounding Thunder Mountain, the site of Saturday’s fatal plane crash. NPS Photo

“They’re working on some plans right now, because they want to recover the bodies. The aircraft recovery will probably come later….The next opportunity for clear weather may be as early as Wednesday, but may be later in the week.”

K2 Aviation, the company that owns the plane, released a statement Monday saying its staff is grieving the loss of life and that the company cooperating with all agencies involved in the recovery and investigation. The company has suspended all flightseeing tours in the wake of Saturday’s fatal crash.