Crime & Safety

Police ID Victims in Long Island Plane Crash

The three victims, one of them reportedly a race car driver, were heading home after attending a wedding in South Carolina.

UPDATED Friday at 1 p.m.

Photos courtesy of Scott Wheeler, @richjcho

Authorities have released the names of the three people killed after a small plane crashed in a residential area in Syosset Tuesday afternoon.

The pilot was identified as 66-year-old David Berube, a race car driver from Bristol, CT and the two passengers were identified as 49-year-old Dana Parenteau, of Holland, VT, and 32-year-old Benjamin Bridges, of Bristol.

Berube, the owner of the plane, his longtime girlfriend and an employee were leaving a wedding in South Carolina and were heading home to Connecticut on Tuesday, the Hartford Courant reports.

The New York Daily News says the wedding was for Berube's son, who changed his Facebook profile photo to a picture of his father on Wednesday.

David Berube's brother, Bruce Berube, posted a statement regarding his brother's death on Facebook, which was shared by the Daily News: “Dave was an unflappable pilot, was a pilot instructor for years, totally fearless! Three lives lost and three families damaged forever. If you believe in God, please say a prayer for them.”

A source tells Patch Parenteau managed a medical clinic in Newport, VT.

Authorities say they found the three bodies and the parts of the plane were found in a “widespread area,” approximately one-third of a mile.

One body was found in the parking lot of Long Island High School for the Arts, a second body was found west of that in the woods and the third body was discovered approximately 50 yards from the second body in Oyster Bay Cove.

Nassau County Traffic Safety Board senior investigator Robert Gretz said the plane’s engine and the four main parts of the plane were recovered Wednesday.

“We’re going to continue to work today to recover pieces of the airplane, primarily the ones in other people’s yards,” he said at a press conference.

No injuries were reported on the ground and only one home sustained minor damages from the crash.

The plane, a 43-year-old Beech BE35 aircraft, suffered an in-flight breakup at approximately 7,000 feet and crashed in the vicinity of Southwoods Road and Cold Spring Road at 3:45 p.m, which caused a loud boom heard by many people in the area.

The plane took off from North Myrtle Beach, S.C. and was headed to Plainfield, Conn., police say.

The pilot reported to air traffic control that he was having difficulty maintaining the aircraft and that more and more instrumentations were malfunctioning, including a vacuum pump failure, Gretz said.

In-flight breakups aren’t particularly common, Gretz said. He has heard of this problem occurring five times in his 18 years.

Police said it has proved very difficult to find parts of the plane and authorities have not recovered any identifications of the victims. “I ask the residents if they come across any personal effects of the crash or small parts of the plane to notify us.” police said.

Residents who come across parts of the plane or personal effects from the crash can call the Second Precinct at 516-573-6200.

The crash made a loud noise, causing alarm inside South Woods M.S., Syosset High School and Berry Hill Elementary School.

This incident is one of several small plane crashes that occurred on Long Island in the past year:

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