Maj. Louis Cantilena and Maj. Paul Schuda

Started by ironputts, February 12, 2018, 01:48:46 PM

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Provided by WCPO Cincinnati:



Maj. Paul Schuda and Maj. Louis Cantilena were among three people killed in an airplane crash near Batesville Saturday night. Photos via CAP.

(Batesville, Ind.) – The identities of three victims of a small plane crash in Franklin County have been released. The Civil Air Patrol says the victims were Louis Cantilena and Paul Schuda, as well as Cantilena's daughter Amy. Cantilena and Schuda were both majors with the Civil Air Patrol, an auxiliary to the U.S. Air Force. A dog aboard the single-engine Cessna died while a second dog was the sole survivor of the crash.
Louis Cantilena was piloting the plane when it went down Saturday night near the Batesville Airport as the crew was making a day trip from Maryland to Kansas City and back. The two men had flown to Missouri to pick up Amy Cantilena from medical school. The group had just refueled and departed from the Columbus, Indiana airport bound for an airport in Frederick, Maryland only about 20 to 30 minutes before the plane went down in a wooded area near North Hamburg Road, only about a mile from the recently closed Batesville Airport.
The FAA and NTSB are investigating the cause of the plane crash. The CAP statement said the plane went down after experiencing engine failure.
Investigators are looking to radio communications and the plane wreckage for further clues. A final determination may take weeks.
The full statement from the Civil Air Patrol is below:
Two Civil Air Patrol members, one from the National Capital Wing and the other from the National Congressional Squadron, were killed late Saturday when their plane crashed after experiencing engine failure in southern Illinois. Majs. Louis R. Cantilena, who was flying the private plane, and Paul F. Schuda died after Cantilena's Cessna crashed in woods about 9 p.m. near Oldenburg, Indiana, about 40 miles northwest of Cincinnati, according to an Associated Press report. Cantilena's daughter was also killed, as was one of two dogs in the plane, Indiana State Police said. According to The Associated Press, State Police Sgt. Wheeles said the Cessna had taken off from an airport outside Columbus, Indiana, while en route from Kansas City, Missouri, to Frederick, Maryland.
Schuda was the National Capital Wing's standardization/evaluation officer and assistant director of operations. He also served as an instructor at CAP's Col. Roland Butler Powered Flight Academy at Blackstone, Virginia. He previously served as the Congressional Squadron's chief of staff from 2006-2012. He joined CAP in March 1998, transferring from the Congressional Squadron to the National Capital Wing in July 2012. Schuda was director of the National Transportation Safety Board Training Center at Ashburn, Virginia. He previously served as deputy director for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Policy and Special Projects staff and as a professor of chemistry at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Cantilena joined CAP in February 1997. He was a professor of medicine in clinical pharmacology and director of clinical pharmacology and medical toxicology at Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland. He also directed a Phase One Clinical Research Unit funded by the National Institutes of Health and the U.S Army and served as a consultant to the National Institutes of Health and the federal Food and Drug Administration.
Greg Putnam, Lt. Col., CAP