California

Pilot, 4 Others Killed When Small Plane Crashes Into Orange County Neighborhood

Editor's Note: The pilot who was killed in the crash was falsely identified as a former Chicago officer by officials and a woman who said she was his daughter. The Orange County Sheriff's Office said Tuesday the pilot was discovered to have law enforcement credentials that were not his. Read updated story here.

The pilot who died when his Cessna airplane broke apart and crashed into a Yorba Linda home Sunday, also killing four people inside the home, was a 75-year-old restaurant owner in Carson City, Nevada, officials and family said Monday.

The plane nose-dived onto the 19000 block of Crestknoll Drive at about 1:45 p.m., Orange County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Carrie Braun said. The 1981 twin-engine Cessna 414A took off from Fullerton Municipal Airport about 10 minutes before the crash, according to National Transportation Safety Board Investigator Eliott Simpson.

The pilot was identified as 75-year-old Antonio Pastini. His daughter told NBC4 Monday that his birth name was Jordan Isaacson. An employee at his restaurant, Kim Lee's Japanese Restaurant and Sushi Bar, declined to comment, citing the wishes of the family.

Radar data indicated the plane made a left turn and climbed 7,800 feet before crashing into the house, leaving the cabin in a ravine behind the house and debris scattered over four blocks, Simpson said. No information is available yet regarding why the plane crashed, Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Cameron Rossman said.

The pilot was flying solo. Two males and two females were killed inside the house, Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Cory Martino said, but their names were withheld pending notification of next of kin. Two injured victims were hospitalized with burn injuries. Their conditions were unknown. One firefighter suffered an ankle injury, Rossman said.

NTSB investigator Maja Smith told reporters that many witnesses saw the plane's wings fall off before it crashed. A total of 72 firefighters from the OCFA, Anaheim and Orange were dispatched to the scene, he said.

NTSB investigators expected to spend Monday gathering evidence and picking up the pieces of the aircraft before it is taken to a storage facility in Phoenix, Simpson said. A preliminary crash report will be available in 10-14 days, he said. Nearby Glenknoll Elementary school, at 6361 Glenknoll Dr., was closed Monday for the investigation, authorities said.

Copyright The Associated Press
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