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Body removed from plane crash without permission!

Surgeon in trouble for removing son’s body from plane crash
Police found debris of craft – no body

Thomas Ropp
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 25, 2005 12:00 AM

In a case federal aviation authorities describe as “one of the weirdest ever,” a Paradise Valley surgeon could face federal and state charges after removing the body of his dead son from a plane crash.

Jacob Lundell, 21, died late Saturday afternoon while doing touch-and-go maneuvers at the Casa Grande Municipal Airport, police said.

His father, Dr. Mark Lundell, and a brother witnessed the crash, authorities said. advertisement

Casa Grande police arrived a few minutes later to find the scene of an obvious fatality – but no body.

“There was a lot of blood and even brain matter in the cockpit,” Casa Grande police Lt. Steve Cantrell said.

Officers said that a witness saw a red pickup truck pull up to the crash site and that two men removed the body. When the witness asked the men if he should call 911, the older man said no, they could handle it, police said.

Case Grande police got the identifying N-number off the plane tail and located a Paradise Valley address.

They contacted Paradise Valley police who arrived at the Lundell home seconds before a red pickup pulled up with the body.

Larry Scott, assistant Paradise Valley police chief, said other family members were present in the driveway, including Deborah Lundell, the victim’s mother.

“They were all in shock,” Scott said.

Deborah Lundell told Channel 3 (KTVK) that her husband brought their son’s body home because “he knew my grieving, he knew my heartache; he knew I needed to see him before they took him away.”

Mark Lundell did the right thing in allowing the family to say goodbye, she told the TV station.

“He may have legally not done the right thing, but morally he did the right thing,” she added.

The body was taken to the Maricopa County Medical Examiner’s Office for an autopsy.

Donn Walker of the FAA’s Los Angeles regional office said their investigator showed up shortly after the Casa Grande police and was baffled.

“He called up and said we just had a plane crash but can’t find the body,” Walker said. “It’s one of the most bizarre things I’ve ever heard.”

Walker said that the victim had neither a pilot’s license nor a valid student pilot’s certificate and that the plane, a 1961 Nord owned by the Lundells, was not registered.

Walker said the FAA is investigating possible federal violations, including the removal of the body from the crash site.

Andrea Esquer, a spokeswoman for the Arizona Attorney General’s Office, would not comment on the state’s position, pending the outcome of the probe by U.S. authorities.

There are several Arizona statutes that address such situations. One requires that human body cannot be removed from the scene of a suspicious death unless a county medical examiner gives permission.

The Lundells have five children. They have appeared in newspaper articles in connection with their love of flying.

When contacted by The Arizona Republic, the family declined to comment.

Only in America! 😀

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By: Newforest - 14th November 2005 at 12:16

http://kvoa.com/Global/story.asp?S=4111201&nav=HMO6

Mother defends husbands action in removing the body!

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By: Newforest - 5th November 2005 at 07:56

PHOENIX – A man who was killed in a plane crash in Casa Grande did not have a pilot’s license and his combined third-class medical and student pilot certificate had expired, according to investigators.
The report by the National Transportation Safety Board also states that the 1961 plane Jacob Lundell used to practice touch-and-go maneuvers at Casa Grande Municipal Airport had never been registered by Lundell’s mother after its purchase.
Lundell’s father, Paradise Valley surgeon Dr. Mark Lundell, and a brother were at the Casa Grande airport when the plane crashed Oct. 22.

Lundell’s father removed his 21-year-old son’s dead body from the crash before investigators could arrive and then drove to his Paradise Valley home, where police officers were waiting.

According to Federal Aviation Administration records, an experimental operating certificate was issued for the airplane in 1980 for the sole purpose of exhibition within a 300-mile radius of Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport.

No charges have been brought against any family members for removing a body from the scene of an accident

Update on the story from Phoenix.

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By: Arm Waver - 26th October 2005 at 09:40

That seems oh so wierd…

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