Five Bodies Found in Colorado Plane Crash Wreckage

The bodies of five people were found inside the wreckage of a single-engine plane that crashed into a cold, murky reservoir in southwestern Colorado over the weekend, authorities said Monday.
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The wreckage will have to be brought to shore before the bodies can be removed, Ouray (yoo-RAY’) County spokeswoman Marti Whitmore said. The plane is about 60 or 70 feet underwater and upside down in about 3 feet of silt, officials said.
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A salvage team is expected to begin raising the wreckage on Wednesday. The bodies were spotted with a remote-control video camera, and divers confirmed them, Whitmore said.
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Authorities haven’t released the identities of the victims but said the flight originated in Gadsden, Ala.
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The single-engine Socata TBM700 crashed at about 2 p.m. Saturday into Ridgway Reservoir, about 25 miles south of Montrose and about 180 miles southwest of Denver.
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The plane was bound for Montrose and had made an intermediate stop in Bartlesville, Okla., Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said.
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The cause of the crash isn’t yet known.
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According to preliminary reports, the pilot reported that the plane was in a spin before losing communication, National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Eric Weiss said Monday.
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That’s consistent with an eyewitness account from a woman who was attending a wedding nearby when the plane crashed.
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“It popped out of the thick, heavy clouds and went into a flat spin,” Lena Martinez told the Ouray County Plaindealer.
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Such eyewitness accounts have been turned over to the FAA and the NTSB for their investigations.
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The tail separated from the plane but the rest of the wreckage was relatively complete, although damaged, authorities said. Sheriff Dominic Mattivi said one wing was nearly severed.
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The plane is registered to an Alabama corporation. Messages left for the company weren’t immediately returned.
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In Alabama, a makeshift memorial appeared outside Gadsden’s Mitchell Elementary School for two boys thought to have been on the plane.
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Two small football helmets, two teddy bears, flowers and candles were piled among written notes from classmates.
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Stephen Powell of Gadsden brought his 9-year-old son to the memorial Monday afternoon. Powell said he had to make two stops because his son was too upset to get out of the car the first time.
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