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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, July 15, 2002

Search for plane continues on Maui

By Karen Blakeman
Advertiser Staff Writer

The Coast Guard, Maui Fire Department rescue crews and several airborne volunteers searched yesterday for a Cessna single-engine airplane last seen Saturday afternoon above Ke'anae Point on East Maui.

A Coast Guard helicopter equipped with night vision equipment continued the search into the night.

Four people were on the flight: two men — one from Maui — and two girls, ages 10 and 11.

Stephen J. Betsill of Wailuku, a construction company owner, was at the controls of the Cessna Cardinal 177, his own airplane. He took off from Kahului Airport about 2 p.m. Saturday, authorities said.

The other man on the plane was a friend of Betsill's. At least one of the two girls was visiting from Dallas and some of the passengers may have been related, authorities said.

The group was to tour East Maui, headed from Kahului toward Hana, and then circle back to Kahului, relatives told authorities. The plane carried five hours' worth of fuel.

Two hours after takeoff, radar picked up the Cessna above Ke'anae Point at 1,600 feet, a normal flying altitude for the area. Ke'anae is along the coastal route to Hana.

Then the plane dropped out of sight.

Betsill's wife, Trudee, called the Federal Aviation Administration at 7:45 p.m. and reported the group missing.

Tweet Coleman, Pacific representative for the FAA, said airports throughout the state were contacted Saturday evening and police searched for the missing people.

Because Betsill had filed no flight plan, the searchers were unsure whether to focus their search on the ocean or the land.

"We just don't know," Coleman said.

At first light yesterday, the Coast Guard launched a C-130 airplane and an HH-65 helicopter and started searching the northeastern coastline and ocean. The Maui Fire Department joined with its helicopter, and firefighters conducted searches on the ground.

Then other assistance flooded in.

The Civil Air Patrol sent two airplanes out to search, one from O'ahu and one from Maui, said patrol search-and-rescue coordinator Lt. Col. Tony Schena.

Coast Guard Lt. jg James Garland said the U.S. Forest Service and members of the state Department of Land and Natural Resources searched the hills and hunting grounds above Hana. Betsill's family hired two private helicopters to search as well.

When contacted at her home last night, Betsill's wife said she and her family did not want to discuss the situation. An officer of the company hired to help in the search said that he, too, had no comment.

Other private air companies, including Blue Hawaiian and Moloka'i Air Shuttle, asked their pilots to be on the lookout as they conducted their rounds.

Coleman asked that aviators keep an ear out on the VHF emergency frequency, 121.5, for the plane's Emergency Locator Transponder. The ELT emits a rhythmic signal upon impact, a noise that fluctuates in volume.

The airplane is white with green stripes. Coleman said the single-engine Cessna 177, a deluxe version of the Cessna 172, was built in 1968.

The search is expected to continue today.

Reach Karen Blakeman at 535-2430 or at kblakeman@honoluluadvertiser.com.