Death Toll Grows to 11 in Reno Air Race Crash

Sept. 20, 2011
Reno police say an 11th person has died from injuries sustained during a plane crash that marked the nation's deadliest air racing disaster.

RENO, Nev. --

Reno police say an 11th person has died from injuries sustained during a plane crash that marked the nation's deadliest air racing disaster.

Police spokeswoman Michele Anderson said Tuesday that the victim had not been identified.

It did not appear that the person died at a local hospital. Officials at the three area hospitals treating victims said none of their patients had died since Sunday night.

A spokesman for the medical examiner's office said officials have been trying to identify body parts since the Friday afternoon accident.

The unexplained crash came midway through a race at the popular aviation competition when a 74-year-old stunt pilot landed in a crowd of spectators.

Pieces of the plane flew through the crowd, cutting off limbs and slicing through skulls.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

A Nevada man who took his 12-year-old to see racing pilots was identified Tuesday as among the 10 people who died in the nation's deadliest air racing disaster.

Virginia Craik told The Associated Press that her son, 45-year-old John Craik, of Gardnerville, died from injuries after a WWII-era fighter plane dived into a crowd of fans Friday during the nation's premier aviation competition. Her grandson was with his dad when the plane crashed. Family members said the boy was not seriously injured and is back in school.

That means eight of the people killed during the air races have been identified and at least two others have not. More than 70 people were treated for injuries, some of them life threatening, in the unexplained crash that also took the life of 74-year-old stunt pilot James Leeward.

That dramatic injury toll was stoking fears across the nation, as relatives and friends flooded Reno officials with inquiries about the whereabouts of spectators. Emergency officials were trying to compile a list of missing people Tuesday.

"You're responding to someone who was with a loved one at one moment and the loved one is not there the next moment," said Kathy Jacobs, executive director of the Crisis Call Center in Reno. "They're looking for answers, and the reality is we can't answer their questions right away."

Leeward's Galloping Ghost Mustang fighter plane disintegrated into a cloud of dust and debris during Friday's race.

The National Championship Air Races drew thousands of people to Reno every September to watch various military and civilian planes race. Local schools often held field trips there, and a local sports book took wagers on the outcomes.

During the races, planes flew wingtip-to-wingtip as low as 50 feet (15 meters) off the ground. The competitors follow an oval path around pylons, with distances and speeds depending on the class of aircraft. Pilots reached speeds of up to 500 mph.

Leeward, was the 20th pilot to die at the races since it began 47 years ago, but Friday's crash was the first where spectators were killed. Some of the injured described being coated in aviation fuel that burned.

Leeward and his team had modified the plane beyond recognition, taking a full 10 feet off the wingspan and cutting the ailerons - the back edges of the wings used to turn the aircraft - by roughly 28 inches.

Leeward was a veteran air racer from Ocala, Fla., who flew in Hollywood films. His father worked in aviation and taught him the trade. He was married with two adult sons. Leeward loved speeding, on the ground or in the air, and had recently taken up racing cars.

The others killed who have been identified were Sharon Stewart, 47, of Reno; Greg Morcom, 47, of Marysville, Wash.; George Hewitt, 60, and Wendy Hewitt, 57, both of Fort Mohave, Ariz.; Michael Wogan, 22, of Scottsdale, Ariz.; and Regina Bynum, 53, of San Angelo, Texas.

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Associated Press writers Michelle Rindels and Cristina Silva in Las Vegas, Scott Sonner in Reno and Brian Skoloff in Salt Lake City contributed to this report.

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