OWLS HEAD, Maine (AP) — A small plane that spiraled downward and burst into flames after striking a pickup truck shortly before takeoff was carrying two University of Maine students and one alumnus, all of whom died in the crash, the school said Saturday.
The school and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity said the victims of Friday night's crash were 22-year-old David Cheney of Beverly, Mass.; 24-year-old Marcelo Rugini, an exchange student from Brazil; and 24-year-old William "B.J." Hannigan III of South Portland.
All three were members of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Cheney was the fraternity's president.
"UMaine's Greek and international student communities are mourning the loss of three of their own, but they are not alone in their grief," said Robert Dana, vice president for student affairs and dean of students. "Losing these three young men — David, Marcelo and B.J. — is a loss for the entire UMaine community and the many people — including faculty and staff — whose lives they touched. They brought great light and energy to our campus, and we will miss them."
The Cessna 172 was heading north on the Knox County Regional Airport runway early Friday night when it struck the truck, which was authorized to be on airport grounds, Knox County Chief Deputy Sheriff Tim Carroll said. The plane continued to climb and as it turned to the east, it dived about 200 to 300 yards into the thick woods and immediately burst into flames, the sheriff's office said.
The university said DNA tests to confirm the identities aren't expected until Wednesday.
One fraternity brother, senior Lucas Bernardi, told the Bangor Daily News that the three had flown out of Bangor International Airport earlier in the day and then toward Lincoln County over a farm where one of the victims had worked over the summer. He said one of the victims had just gotten his pilot's license and wanted to take his friends for a fun ride.
"It wasn't the first time they had been flying," Bernardi told the newspaper. "I was supposed to go with them, but I didn't."
Hannigan, who graduated from the university in 2011 with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering, was piloting the plane and had been working on his flight hours, Dana said.
Cheney was a business major. Rugini, who lived in Nobleboro and was from Muliterno, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, was an economics major.
Lambda Chi Alpha has been in touch with the victims' families and has been keeping the university informed, Dana said.
Fraternity members gathered in solidarity at their campus house Saturday night, and a police officer was stationed outside to keep away the media, the Bangor Daily News reported.
The pickup truck that was struck by the plane was allowed to be at the airport and was driven by a pilot who was picking up another pilot who had parked a plane in a hangar, Carroll said. The truck driver wasn't hurt.
All trucks at the airport are equipped with radios to pick up any traffic from planes, airport manager Jeff Northgraves said. He said planes are required to radio their positions before, during and after takeoff. He said it wasn't known yet whether the plane that crashed had radioed its actions.
The collision sent flames 10 to 20 feet in the air and smoke billowing into the sky. The first people to the scene tried unsuccessfully to pull one of the occupants from the burning wreckage, said John Newcomb, president of the Downeast Air airline services company, who was among those who tried to help.
The area is so rough that a helicopter will be needed to remove the four-seat plane, the same way the bodies were removed, Northgraves said.
Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board planned to begin investigating the crash Saturday.
Local News
Beverly man among three killed in Maine plane crash
- Local News
-
-
National Grid underground cable project in Salem will avoid Derby Street
SALEM — National Grid announced today that it has changed the preferred route for its underground transmission project and will not be going down Derby Street.
-
School's longer year all but gone
SALEM -- School Committee member Janet Crane did something extraordinary last night. She was the most important person at a meeting she did not attend. Crane, who had a long-scheduled absence, is expected to break a 3-3 school board deadlock on the e
-
Soldier admits role in $1M cocaine deal
PEABODY -- A staff sergeant in the Arizona National Guard admitted yesterday that he acted as the "bag man" in a $1 million deal to move 11 kilograms, nearly 25 pounds, of cocaine from Mexico to Canada in December 2011. Gerardo Flores, 29, of Tucso
-
Sapienza reflects on his tenure
PEABODY -- Ed Sapienza took the job of principal six years ago, at a time when Peabody High School had been roiled by stories of drug-abusing students and fierce turf battles among administrators. He's retiring now -- for a second time -- under far d
-
Child molester denied permission to travel to NH
IPSWICH -- An Ipswich woman who admitted to molesting her own two children for years, in what a veteran prosecutor said might be the worst case of sexual abuse he had ever seen, now wants permission from a judge to vacation in New Hampshire with her
- Correction
- Taxi rate hike put on hold
- Woman admits story was a hoax
- Police: Man assaults Home Depot employee
- Hells Angels trial may be postponed
- Police
- Gloucester mailman accused of stealing debit card and pin, then spending $4,000
- House OKs civil service change
- UPDATE: Beverly woman admits kidnapping story was a hoax
- Kidnapped woman found in trunk of car
- Wharf hotel set to expand
- It's Family Festival time again
- Traffic stop results in drug arrest
- Marblehead man charged with child rape
- A truck out of place leads to arrest of suspect
- Remembering Kristen Crowley
- Rail trail brush clearing part of Danvers Electric maintenance plan
- Council mulls hike in taxi fare
- Quick-thinking DPW worker saves choking man
- Police
- Charter school head is running for Salem School Committee
- Danvers transfer station may expand
- Judge dismisses suit against Marblehead police
- Candidates flood council race
- Salem Academy Charter School graduation
-
National Grid underground cable project in Salem will avoid Derby Street




