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Mon, Mar 15, 2004

Cessna 170 Wreckage Believed Found In Washington State

Flight Missing For Two Weeks

A private search team has found what could be the wreckage of a Cessna 170 (file photo of type, below), two weeks after the plane failed to arrive at Auburn (WA).

As for the two men on board, pilot David Verstrate, 65, of Federal Way, and his brother-in-law, Harold Bennett, 59, of Puyallup, Bob Mester of Underwater Admiralty Services believes their bodies are still on board.

"The airplane is intact, so my guess would be they're still strapped into the pilot and passenger's position," Mester said.

The Civil Air Patrol led an intensive air and land search after the aircraft went missing on March 1st. But Mester's company found what he thinks is the missing aircraft, resting at the bottom of Washington's Case Inlet. Using sonar, he was able to compile a picture of the aircraft, resting upside down at the bottom of the inlet.

"I'm quite confident it is the plane, because ... it fit the general length, width and characteristics right down to the money," Mester said.

Family friend Casey Smith says he's certain the wreckage at the bottom of the inlet is the missing 170. He said the CAP had spotted an oil slick in the area a week after the aircraft went missing. "We need to get these guys out of there, it's been two weeks and if we wait much longer there's really not going to be anything to bring up," Smith told The Associated Press Saturday night.

In fact, Smith said the family was incredulous that the aircraft hadn't been raised by now. "At this point we're just going to consider hiring an attorney over this deal because it's been two weeks now and now it's confirmed the plane is down there, now they won't even let us go down and get the victims out so we can put them to burial," he said.

FMI: www.nwrain.net/~newtsuit/uasi

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