Four Connecticut residents, including a teenager taking flying lessons, were killed in a plane crash in Vermont over the weekend, authorities said.
The four-seat, single-engine Piper aircraft departed from Windham Airport in Connecticut at about 8:30 a.m. Sunday for a short flight to Ferrisburgh where those onboard stopped for a brunch reservation at Basin Hill, according to Vermont State Police.
The party of four left the restaurant shortly after noon to fly back to Connecticut, leaving the Basin Harbor Airport around 12:15 p.m.
While no reports were received about an aircraft in distress or plane crash, the plane failed to return back to Windham and relatives of the occupants reported the situation to the Connecticut State Police and the Middletown, Connecticut Police Department, police said.
Working with the Federal Aviation Administration, authorities used cellphone data to track down the plane’s location near the airstrip in Vermont.
Using a drone, Vermont state police and local agencies located the wreckage in a wooded area east of the Basin Airport around 12:20 a.m. on Monday.
First responders arrived at the scene and pronounced all four on board dead.
They were identified on Monday as Paul Pelletier, 55, of Columbia; Frank Rodriguez, 88, of Lebanon; Susan Van Ness, 51; and her daughter Delilah Van Ness, 15, both of Middletown.
Delilah Van Ness, a sophomore at Middletown High School, was taking flight lessons with Pelletier, the school’s aviation technology teacher.
It’s not clear who was piloting the aircraft when it crashed.
“This unimaginable loss has left a void in our hearts and our community,” Dr. Alberto Vázquez Matos, Superintendent of Middletown Public Schools, said in a statement.
“Paul, Delilah, and Susan were special individuals whose absence is already being felt throughout our district and city,” he added.
The high school was closed on Tuesday to let the school community grieve. School officials said counseling will be available to students and faculty when they return.
The cause of the crash remains under investigation by the FAA and National Transit Safety Board.
The bodies of the victims were brought to the medical examiner’s office in Burlington, where autopsies will be conducted to determine the cause of death.