Some remains found in Fossett plane wreckage

A small amount of human remains has been found in the wreckage of the plane that adventurer Steve Fossett was flying when he disappeared last year, a National Transportation Safety Board official said Thursday.

Also, Major Ed Dames appeared on Coast to Coast AM to give his $.02 on these developments. In late 2007, his remote viewing team predicted the location in which Fossett perished. Their prediction was about 47 miles from where this discovery has taken place.

Host George Noory commended Dames and his team for their accuracy, but Dames was disappointed. I’m paraphrasing here, but he said the 50-mile discrepancy was unacceptable and because of that, was skeptical about whether this really is the actual wreckage and/or location.

A search team that was examining the wreckage, which was found Wednesday at an altitude of about 10,000 feet in the Sierra Nevada near Mammoth Lakes, found “very little” remains among the debris, acting NTSB Chairman Mark Rosenker said.

Asked whether the remains were enough for an identification, Rosenker said, “I believe the coroner will be able to do some work.”

Earlier Thursday, Madera County Sheriff John Anderson said the single-engine Bellanca appeared to have crashed into the side of a mountain in the Sierra Nevada in eastern California, and the damage was “so severe I doubt someone would’ve walked away from it.” 

Fossett was last seen the morning of September 3, 2007, when he took off from the Flying-M Ranch outside Minden, Nevada, on what he said would be a pleasure flight over the Sierra Nevada. 

Investigators homed in on the area near Mammoth Lakes on Wednesday after hikers there found a sweatshirt, cash and identification cards with Fossett’s name.

The hikers did not find any wreckage; an aerial search discovered the airplane parts about a quarter-mile away, Anderson said.

Investigators, based on examinations of the debris, believe that the plane struck the mountain horizontally but not necessarily head-on

Investigators, based on examinations of the debris, believe that the plane struck the mountain horizontally but not necessarily head-on

Ground crews confirmed Wednesday night that the wreckage was Fossett’s plane. The sheriff said authorities were not certain whether the cash and sweatshirt belonged to Fossett.

The engine was about 300 feet higher on the mountain than the fuselage and the wings, Anderson said.

An NTSB team arrived Thursday to investigate the crash. Rosenker said investigators, based on examinations of the debris, believe that the plane struck the mountain horizontally but not necessarily head-on.

It may take “weeks, perhaps months to have a better understanding of what happened on that mountain that day,” he said. 

Fossett’s disappearance prompted a search that ultimately included thousands of volunteers, hundreds of officials and dozens of aircraft poring over an area more than twice the size of New Jersey.

The search was officially suspended a year ago Friday, and a Chicago probate court judge declared Fossett dead in February.

Fossett made his money in the financial services industry but became renowned for his daredevil exploits. He was the first person to circle the globe solo in a balloon, accomplishing the feat in 2002, and the first to fly a plane around the world solo without refueling, which he did three years later. He also set world records in round-the-world sailing and cross-country skiing. 

– MiltonSearch.com/AfterDark and CNN.com

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One Response to “Some remains found in Fossett plane wreckage”

  1. MiltonSearch.com says:

    The Associated Press
    October 31, 2008

    Officials have found two large human bones near the crash site of adventurer Steve Fossett’s plane in California’s Sierra Nevada.

    Madera County Sheriff John Anderson says searchers found the bones just east of the crash site.

    He says investigators should know in about a week whether the bones are Fossett’s.

    Anderson says searchers also found Fossett’s tennis shoes, his Illinois driver’s licence and a credit card.

    The shoes and driver’s licence had animal bite marks on them.

    Anderson says previous bone fragments discovered near the wreckage were too small for DNA tests.

    Fossett vanished in September 2007, sparking an intensive search.

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