***Update 6:20p.m. Thursday, Aug. 30, 2018***
Vermont State Police Emergency crews successfully recovered the bodies of the three victims of the glider crash late Thursday afternoon. The bodies were brought from the crash siteto the Beaver Meadow Trailhead staging area in Morristownat about 5 pm and transported to the Chief Medical Examiner's Office in Burlington for autopsy.
***Update 2:35p.m. Thursday, Aug. 30, 2018***
Thursday afternoon, the Vermont State Police and Morristown Police Department identified the victims of Wednesday’s glider crash on Sterling Mountain in Morristown as follows:
- Donald Post, 70, of Stowe, the glider’s pilot.
- Frank Moroz III, 58, of Hamden, Connecticut.
- Suzanne Moroz, 56, of Hamden, Connecticut.
At this hour, a recovery operation is underway on Sterling Mountain to remove the bodies from the site of the crash and bring them down to a staging area at the Beaver Meadow Trailhead in the Mount Mansfield State Forest. From there, funeral home personnel will transport the bodies to the Chief Medical Examiner’s Office in Burlington for autopsies to determine cause and manner of death.
The Morristown Police Department is leading the death investigation. The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board are sending investigators to Vermont to determine the cause of the glider crash. The Vermont State Police, working in conjunction with numerous other agencies, is coordinating the operation to recover the bodies of the three victims.
Recovery efforts resumed at about 9 a.m. Thursday and are expected to continue for several more hours. The crash site is in remote, heavily wooded forest near the summit of Sterling Mountain. The site is off the Long Trail more than a mile from the Beaver Meadow Trailhead, and about 1,500 feet higher in elevation.
The glider, a Schweizer with tail number 17970, is owned by Stowe Soaring and operated from the Morrisville-Stowe State Airport. The fuselage is reported to be intact, with the wings torn away in the crash. A private pilot based at the Morrisville-Stowe State Airport located the wreckage from the air at about 5:35 p.m. Wednesday, shortly after she took off to make one last pass over the area where the glider was lost before thunderstorms arrived.
Agencies involved in the search and recovery effort include: Morristown Police Department, Morrisville Fire Department, Vermont State Police Search and Rescue, Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife, Stowe Mountain Rescue, Colchester Technical Rescue, Waterbury Backcountry Rescue Team, Huntington Search and Rescue andRichmond Rescue.
Further updates will be issued when additional information is available.
***Update 10:45 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2018***
CASE#: 18A103904
STATION:Williston
CONTACT#: 802-878-7111
DATE/TIME: 08/29/2018 at 1:56 p.m.
INCIDENT LOCATION: Morrisville-Stowe State Airport,2305 Laporte Rd., Stowe, Vermont
INCIDENT: Downed glider - search and rescue
