NORFOLK, Va., Sept. 7, 2007

Stunt Plane Pilot Dies In Air Show Crash

World War II Plane Crashes During Rehearsals In Virginia

  • The Skytypers Air Show Team right before a fatal crash while practicing for the Oceana Air Show in Norfolk, Va., Sept. 7, 2007.

    The Skytypers Air Show Team right before a fatal crash while practicing for the Oceana Air Show in Norfolk, Va., Sept. 7, 2007.  (CBS)

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(AP)  The pilot of a civilian World War II stunt plane died Friday after the plane crashed while practicing just hours before an air show, officials said.

Jan Wildbergh, the flight leader with the Skytypers Air Show Team, died following the crash at the Oceana Naval Air Station, team sponsor Geico Insurance said in a statement.

Larry Arken, deputy squadron commander of the six-man team, said earlier that the pilots had just finished rehearsing their routine at the Virginia Beach base and were coming in for a landing when the No. 6 plane, the last in the formation, crashed.

Arken was flying first, so he did not see the plane go down. But he said he heard from witnesses that the plane flew into the ground while still under its own power, he told The Associated Press from Oceana when reached on his cell phone.

Wildbergh trained with the Dutch Air Force, for which he flew first-generation jet fighters during the Cold War, the Geico statement said. He moved to the U.S. to pilot private aircraft, ran a flight school and joined Skytypers in 1986.

The crash was being investigated, base spokesman Troy Snead said. The base was not open to the public when the plane crashed about noon, but some invited guests were watching the practice, Snead said.

The plane had no ejection system, and the pilot was flying too low to use his parachute, team spokesman Ralph Roberts told WAVY-TV in Portsmouth.

"He probably tried to continue to make the maneuver and save the plane, possibly by doing a belly flop," Roberts said.

The Skytypers Air Show Team performs at shows across the country, often doing low-level flying maneuvers and creating aerial smoke messages, called skytyping, according to its Web site. A computer in the lead plane sends radio signals to the others to coordinate puffs of smoke to form words while the planes fly about 250 feet apart.

The New York City-based team consists of six SNJ-2 planes, which were used to train Allied pilots in World War II. Only about 10 of them are left in the world, according to the Web site, which says the team is the "only World War II civilian squadron flying today."

The annual three-day air show, sponsored by the Navy, was still scheduled to begin Friday evening, Snead said. About 250,000 people are expected for exhibits and aerial performers including the Blue Angels, the Navy's precision flying team.


© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by tucano2 September 8, 2007 7:50 PM EDT
What was the aircraft? Was it a Mustang or something else? Was this craft just in Big Bear Ca''s air show a week or so ago?
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by sunphun12 September 7, 2007 11:32 PM EDT
Oceana Naval Station is located in Virginia Beach and not Norfolk. This is always been a great show. In fact just this very morning there was an article in the local papers dealing with safety issues at Air Shows.
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by Krazcarl September 7, 2007 11:24 PM EDT
Everyone loves a great airshow...SAD NEWS.
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by barbaraf4 September 7, 2007 11:10 PM EDT
There are old pilots; there are bold pilots. There are no old, bold pilots.

Jan Wildbergh, may you touch the face of God.
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