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Founder of Bloomington-based Precision Lens crashes vintage airplane near Montana airport, dies

WCCO digital headlines: Morning of June 28, 2023
WCCO digital headlines: Morning of June 28, 2023 01:09

HAMILTON, Mont. (AP) — The founder of the Minnesota-based medical products company Precision Lens died when a vintage plane crashed shortly after takeoff at an airport in Montana.

Paul Ehlen was piloting the plane that went down at 8:07 a.m. Tuesday at the Ravalli County Airport, the company's chief financial officer, Bill Henneman, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported. The aircraft was a World War II vintage P-40E registered with the Federal Aviation Administration to one of Ehlen's LLCs.

"Precision Lens is saddened by the passing earlier today of its founder Paul Ehlen," the company said in a statement. "Paul had a passion for restoring and flying vintage military aircraft, and he was killed this morning when the single-engine P-40 he was flying back to Minneapolis suffered a mechanical failure on takeoff."

Wings of the North and it's volunteers were extremely saddened to learn of the accident involving the Curtiss P-40...

Posted by AirExpo on Tuesday, June 27, 2023

The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate, authorities said.

Ehlen was alone on the plane and was pronounced dead at the scene, according to a news release from the Ravalli County Sheriff's Office. The airport is in Hamilton, Montana, near Missoula, where Ehlen had a home.

Precision Lens is based in Bloomington, Minnesota.

MORE NEWS: NTSB investigating deadly agricultural plane crash near Beltrami

In February, a federal jury found Ehlen and his Cameron-Ehlen Group Inc., which does business as Precision Lens, violated the federal anti-kickback statute and False Claims Act. A judge ordered damages of $487 million. The company said at the time that it planned to appeal.

Prosecutors at the trial said Precision Lens paid eye surgeons through luxury ski vacations and trips to exclusive sporting events to induce them to use their products in cataract surgeries that were reimbursed by Medicare.

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