Thousand Oaks family, Acton pilot killed in Oregon plane crash

Officials in Linn County, Oregon have identified a family of three from Thousand Oaks and a pilot from Acton who died in a small plane crash on Friday.
John A. Zitting, 42, his wife Karen Blackmore Zitting, 37, and their 17-year-old son, John Brendan Zitting, died in the 10:53 a.m. crash in a field near an airport about two mile north of Harrisburg, Oregon, Linn County sheriff’s officials said in a written statement.
Also killed was Mark Gregory Aletky, 67, of Acton, a certified pilot hired by the Zitting family to fly them from Van Nuys, California to Eugene, Oregon in a single-engine, six-seat 1984 Piper PA-46-310P, sheriff’s officials said.
“Investigators learned the plane was flying on instrument and was approaching the Eugene Airport,” according the Linn County Sheriff’s Office statement. “Witnesses in Harrisburg described seeing the plane flying north at a low altitude when, for unknown reasons, it suddenly turned and crashed into a grass field just west of Peoria Road.”
The aircraft flew past Eugene Airport prior to the crash, authorities said. It was unclear why.
All four occupants of the airplane were pronounced dead at the scene.
The Oregonian reported that the family was on their way to a college scouting trip for John Brendan Zitting, a high school senior, at the University of Oregon.
In a 911 dispatch tape released by the sheriff’s department, a man who identified himself as Loren Later reports discovering the grisly scene.
•Audio: 911 dispatch tape
“A small aircraft just crashed into a field,” the witness reported as he made his way to the crash scene to try to help with coworkers after seeing the airplane fall from the sky from a nearby office.
“Is anybody in there? Yeah, there’s people in here,” Later is heard saying said. “Four people.”
“Nobody is conscious,” he said. “We’re checking to see if there’s a pulse or anything… four people, no pulse.. there’s nobody that appears to be alive.”
“The cockpit is really smashed up. The windshield has got blood splattered on it,” the witness reported.
He added that the weather conditions at the crash scene were, “brutal.”
The aircraft was based out of Van Nuys Airport, and the pilot worked for Park City Aviation, officials said.
The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board arrived on scene Friday afternoon to join the investigation into the cause of the crash, sheriff’s officials said. Authorities planned to remove the wreckage sometime over the weekend.

PHOTO courtesy of the Linn County Sheriff’s Office

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