Update
Plane crashes near Beaumont; three dead
By ANGELA WEAVER and MIKE TOBIAS - Port Arthur News Staff Writers
BEAUMONT -- Erik Salna and his wife, Jane, said they expected a loud explosion when they watched a Hawker 700 twin-engine jet go down in a field off FM 105, but the crash was more a muffled "poof."
"It was like a leaf falling from a tree," Salna, a KBMT Channel 12 anchor, said recalling the surreal sight of the plane crash he and his wife witnessed from their Tolliver Road home Saturday evening.
"We were expecting a loud explosion," Salna continued. "It was more like a muffle, or a poof. There was no smoke, and there was no fire."
That was the consensus among other reported accounts of the tragic crash of a twin-engine jet in a field off Highway 105, just north of Major Drive in Beaumont that left three passengers dead. Salna and his wife were gardening when they heard the hum of a jet flying at what they said seemed a little lower than usual.
"The only reason we took interest was that is was low and loud," Salna said. "We followed it in the sky and watched the plane take its nose up a bit, then all of a sudden it went quiet, like the engine shut off. It just kind of stalled there and it sounded like the engine was trying to kick back on one last time before it just fell.
"We saw it till it went below the tree line and we heard the thud."
Star Flite Aviation President Jeff Ware said he was well acquainted with the three pilots who died when the jet owned by his charter service crashed near Sour Lake.
"They were doing their training at Beaumont Municipal," Ware said. "It was just basic pilot training."
He declined further comment on the pilots and also to release the identity of the three men pending notification of their families.
Beaumont Fire Department Capt. Keith Stewart said fire fighters were dispatched at 6:57 p.m. Saturday and discovered two fatalities at the scene. The crash site was then turned over to the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department and the Texas Department of Public Safety. Sheriff Mitch Woods said the crash occurred off FM 105 just outside the Beaumont city limits near Al Cook's Nursery, and later said there were, in fact, three passengers who died when the plane went down.
"It's a twin-engine jet and it looks like there were three passengers and they were all deceased," Woods said. "The DPS will be handling the investigation and securing the scene until NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) and Federal Aviation Administration officials come tomorrow morning."
DPS officials were unable to be reached for comment.
Woods said that Hobby lost contact with the aircraft around 7 p.m. A local witness, he said, also reported seeing the plane go down about the same time. No homes were damaged and no injuries occurred on the ground.
Ware said it is common for pilots in training to land several times at different airports during their training. The Hawker 700, a mid-size twin-engine jet with room for 7-8 passengers and capable of flying at 400 knots, left William P. Hobby Airport in Houston Saturday afternoon and the pilots were expected at Beaumont Municipal. He said the men would have returned to Hobby after training.