Pilot killed in crash grew up in Lawrence

Crew of 3 was en route to fight N.M. wildfire

? A converted military plane crashed Saturday in heavy fog in the mountains that frame the Salt Lake valley, killing three members of a private firefighting company, authorities said, including the pilot, who grew up in Lawrence.

Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park said the plane was en route from Missoula, Mont., to Alamogordo, N.M., when it failed to clear a pass in the Oquirrh Mountains.

The sheriff identified the pilot as Tom Risk, 66, of Littleton, Colo., and the crew members as Mike Flynn, 59, of Alamogordo, N.M., and Brian Buss, 32, of Alberton, Mont.

Risk was born in Lawrence and graduated from Lawrence High School in 1962, said his sister Janiece Scribner, who still lives in Lawrence.

His mother, Kathryn Risk, also still lives here, and his sister Peggy Hulteen lives in Rossville.

The crew members for Missoula-based Neptune Aviation were bound for southern New Mexico to help fight a nearly 30-square-mile wildfire, said Dan Ware, a spokesman for the New Mexico Forestry Division.

“While we must pause to mourn their loss, within the wildland community we must also honor them by continuing to fight fires to protect our communities,” state forester Arthur Blazer said.

The wildfire, which was 20 percent contained, was threatening a home and several outbuildings and a power distribution line, officials said.

Scribner said her brother had learned to fly at the Lawrence Municipal Airport after he returned from serving in Vietnam. He was in the Marines. He had worked as a firefighting pilot for several years, she said.

The family on Sunday was still dealing with the shocking news and waiting to learn more information.

“Until they do their investigation, we just don’t know,” Scribner said.

Neptune’s ground safety and security coordinator, Miek Pfau, said he could confirm only that the company lost an aircraft.

The wreckage of the plane, a twin-propeller P2V Neptune with a 100-foot wing span, was located near Stockton Pass, spread out over about 100 yards, Park said.

Search and rescue crews reached the steep, rugged site on foot and all-terrain vehicles to recover the bodies. They were turned over to the state medical examiner, he said.

Park said the Neptune, a plane developed during the Korean war that is commonly used to fight wildfires, had been equipped for dropping fire retardant.

He said visibility was only 100 feet when the plane failed to clear Stockton Pass. It missed the pass by an eighth of a mile and slammed into a mountain instead, but should have been flying higher, he said.

The plane was being tracked by the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, which lost track of it before the pilot could report any trouble or issue a distress signal, the sheriff said.