PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The flight crew that died in a fiery crash aboard Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz's private plane this weekend had flown for the millionaire businessman and philanthropist for nearly a decade, and among them was a pilot who survived an earlier fatal crash, relatives said Monday.

Officials work near wreckage at the scene at Hanscom Field inBedford, Mass.
Officials work near wreckage at the scene at Hanscom Field inBedford, Mass.(AP Photo/Boston Herald, Mark Garfinkel, Pool)
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Katz's Gulfstream jet crashed during takeoff near Boston on Saturday night, killing him, three guests and three crew members.

The chief pilot was James McDowell, of Georgetown, Delaware, authorities said. Spouses identified two of the crew members Monday as flight attendant Teresa Benhoff, 48, of Easton, Maryland, and co-pilot Bauke "Mike" de Vries, 45, of Marlton, New Jersey.

"I knew he was on a safe plane. I knew it was a well-maintained plane," de Vries' wife, Shelly, told The Associated Press. "I know the other captain had a great, long history, (and) was also a mechanic."

The rest of the victims were identified earlier Katz's neighbor at the New Jersey shore, Anne Leeds, a 74-year-old retired preschool teacher he invited on the trip just that day; Marcella Dalsey, the director of Katz's son's foundation; and Susan Asbell, 67, the wife of a former New Jersey county prosecutor.

The trip would be the last of several over the years the flight crew took with Katz; all three had worked for him for 10 to 15 years, relatives said. They had been expecting to take Katz, a sports team owner-turned-philanthropist, to France later this month, said Benhoff's husband, Dan.

The co-pilot, De Vries, had come to the U.S. from the Netherlands as a young man to attend flight school. In the early 1990s, he was a passenger in a two-man crash that killed a pilot at a southern New Jersey airport, his wife said.

"Lucky for him, he didn't remember it, and he didn't remember about 12 to 24 hours before it," she said.

So he had no fear, she said, and still loved to fly.

Katz had gone to Massachusetts on Saturday to attend an education-related event at the home of historian Doris Kearns Goodwin. He often would take spur-of-the-moment trips, and his crew was at the ready. Benhoff said his wife was on call all day, every day, and they spoke throughout the day Saturday.

"She loved to fly," he said. "She trusted that airplane."

 

Skid marks are seen on the end of a runway at Hanscom Field in Bedford, Mass. (AP Photo/Boston Herald, Mark Garfinkel, Pool)
Skid marks are seen on the end of a runway at Hanscom Field in Bedford, Mass. (AP Photo/Boston Herald, Mark Garfinkel, Pool)
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Benhoff loved working for Katz, her husband said, and had gotten to know Katz's late wife, his children and grandchildren during their vacations, business trips and flights to and from family homes in Philadelphia; Palm Beach, Florida; the New Jersey shore; and New York.

The family of McDowell, the chief pilot, declined to comment.

At the crash site Monday, tire marks were visible where the jet ran off the runway at Hanscom Field in Bedford, Massachusetts. The plane had burst through a chain-link fence and toppled part of a runway lighting system.

The cockpit was burned but mostly intact, with the nose resting on a hill, and the burned-out fuselage lying in a ravine. The victims' bodies had been removed.

In 911 calls released Monday, neighbors described a loud explosion and towering column of smoke. One caller Saturday night said it looked like "an atomic bomb went off" and described "a mushroom cloud" of smoke and fire.

"It sounded as if you were standing next to a cannon or close to fireworks," said Mike Stevens, 42, who said he was visiting family in the area when he heard the crash and called police.

Katz, who was 72, made his fortune investing in parking lots and the New York Yankees' cable network. He once owned the NBA's New Jersey Nets and the NHL's New Jersey Devils and in 2012 became a minority investor in the Inquirer.

Less than a week before the crash, Katz and Harold H.F. "Gerry" Lenfest struck a deal to gain full control of the Inquirer as well as the Philadelphia Daily News and Philly.com by buying out their co-owners for $88 million.

A public memorial service for him was planned for Wednesday at Temple University in Philadelphia, where Katz was an alumnus and trustee.


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