Current:Home > StocksA jet carrying 5 people mysteriously vanished in 1971. Experts say they've found the wreckage in Lake Champlain. -Wealth Navigators Hub
A jet carrying 5 people mysteriously vanished in 1971. Experts say they've found the wreckage in Lake Champlain.
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:22:56
Fifty-three years after a private plane carrying five men disappeared on a snowy Vermont night, experts believe they have found the wreckage of the long-lost jet in Lake Champlain.
The corporate jet disappeared shortly after departing the Burlington airport for Providence, Rhode Island, on Jan. 27, 1971. Those aboard included two crew members and three employees of the Atlanta, Georgia, development company Cousin's Properties, who were working on a development project in Burlington.
Initial searches for the 10-seat Jet Commander turned up no wreckage and the lake, which is 400 feet at its deepest point, froze over four days after the plane was lost. At least 17 other searches happened, until underwater searcher Garry Kozak and a team using a remotely operated vehicle last month found wreckage of a jet with the same custom paint scheme in the lake, close to where the radio control tower had last tracked the plane before it disappeared. Sonar images were taken of the wreck found in 200 feet near Juniper Island. The island is slightly more than 3 miles southwest of Burlington.
"With all those pieces of evidence, we're 99% absolutely sure," Kozak said Monday.
The discovery of the wreckage in Lake Champlain, which is sandwiched between New York and Vermont, gives the families of the victims "some closure and answers a lot of the questions they had," he said.
Kozak told CBS affiliate WCAX-TV that the search may have taken so long because jets break up into many pieces that aren't easy to spot.
"A jet, it looks like a pile of rocks, literally. So, to most people looking at sonar data, they can overlook it because they'll go, 'Oh, that looks like geology," Kozak told the station.
According to his website, Kozak's career in undersea search and survey began in 1972 and his company specializes in shipwreck and aircraft location. In 2012, Kozak was a member of a team that discovered a World War II-era German submarine in waters off Nantucket.
While relatives are grateful and relieved that the plane has been found, the discovery also opens up more questions and old wounds.
"To have this found now ... it's peaceful feeling, at the same time it's a very sad feeling," Barbara Nikita, niece of pilot George Nikita, said in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. "We know what happened. We've seen a couple of photos. We're struggling I think with that now."
Frank Wilder's father, also Frank Wilder, was a passenger on the plane.
"Spending 53 years not knowing if the plane was in the lake or maybe on a mountainside around there somewhere was distressing," said Wilder, who lives outside if Philadelphia. "And again, I'm feeling relieved that I know where the plane is now but unfortunately it's opening other questions and we have to work on those now."
When the ice melted in the spring of 1971, debris from the plane was found on Shelburne Point, according to Kozak. An underwater search in May of 1971 was unable to find the wreckage. At least 17 other searches happened, including in 2014, according to Kozak. At that time, authorities were spurred by curiosity after the Malaysia Airlines plane disappearance that year with the hope that new technology would find the wreck but it did not.
Barbara Nikita, who lives in southern California and her cousin Kristina Nikita Coffey, who lives in Tennessee, spearheaded recent search efforts and contacted other victims' relatives.
What was fascinating in reconnecting with the group was "everybody had pieces of the pie and the puzzle that when we started sharing information and sharing documents what we got was a much greater both understanding and perspective of the information, how we were all impacted by this," said Charles Williams, whose father, Robert Ransom Williams III, an employee of Cousin's Properties, was on the plane.
The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating to verify if it is the plane, Williams said. The NTSB doesn't do salvage operations, which would be expensive, Williams said.
"Whether there is tangible remains, and I hate to say it that way, and worth disturbing that's a decision that we'll have to figure out later, and part of what we're unpacking now," he said. "It's hard when you start to think about that."
The relatives of the victims plan to hold a memorial now that they know where the plane is located.
The announcement of the dicovery comes about 10 months after wreckage from a Tuskegee airman's plane that crashed during a World War II training mission was recovered from Lake Huron.
- In:
- Plane Crash
- Vermont
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Father fatally shot after fight with ex-girlfriend's fiancé during child custody exchange, Colorado police say
- What is Temu? What we know about the e-commerce company with multiple Super Bowl ads
- Biden reelection campaign joins TikTok — though Biden banned its use on government devices
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- On Super Bowl broadcast, ‘He Gets Us’ ads featuring Jesus stand out for change-of-pace message
- Video shows deputies fired dozens of shots at armed 81-year-old man in South Carolina
- American Express, Visa, Mastercard move ahead with code to track gun store purchases in California
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- P.F. Chang's will give free Valentine's dumplings to those dumped over a text message
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Sports betting around Super Bowl 58 appears to have broken several records
- Inflation ran hotter than expected in January, complicating the Fed's rate decision
- Race to succeed George Santos in Congress reaches stormy climax in New York’s suburbs
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Kentucky lawmakers advance proposed property tax freeze for older homeowners
- Dozens of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes in Rafah
- Tony Romo's singing, meandering Super Bowl broadcast left us wanting ... less
Recommendation
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Yes, a lot of people watched the Super Bowl, but the monoculture is still a myth
Trump endorses a new RNC chair. The current chair says she’s not yet leaving the job
Love (and 460 million flowers) are in the air for Valentine’s Day, but not without a Miami layover
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Stock market today: Asian shares are mostly higher ahead of US inflation report
Trump endorses a new RNC chair. The current chair says she’s not yet leaving the job
What is Temu? What we know about the e-commerce company with multiple Super Bowl ads