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NNSL Photo/graphic

A Griffon search and rescue helicopter from Cold Lake, Alta., sits on the tarmac next to the Arctic Sunwest hangar at the Yellowknife airport Thursday. An Arctic Sunwest Cessna 185 heading for Blachford Lake Lodge crashed Wednesday, leaving three aboard dead and one seriously injured. - Christine Grimard/NNSL photo
Lone survivor of plane crash 'pretty lucky'

Peter Crnogorac
Northern News Services

Somba K'e/Yellowknife (Jan 05/07) - A Ndilo man was killed and one injured following the crash of a Cessna 185 last week. Alfred Tsetta, 40, of Ndilo was the only one of four people on board the Arctic Sunwest plane to survive the Jan. 3 incident.

The charter flight was headed to Blachford Lake Lodge when it went down on Jan. 3. Dead are Ndilo's Albert Doctor, 41, Jason Watt, 36, of Trenton, Ont., and Patrick Alexander (Lawton), 53 of Eckville, Alta.

Tsetta is recovering in an Edmonton hospital. Investigators from the Transportation Safety Board (TSB) and the coroner's office were on the scene near Blachford Lake Friday.

RCMP Const. Roxanne Dreilich said Tsetta, who was taken to the Stanton Territorial Hospital Thursday afternoon, was transferred to an Edmonton hospital late Thursday.

"He was alert and talking," Dreilich said. "I don't believe his injuries are life threatening. He has broken bones at the most; he's pretty lucky."

On Friday, the RCMP handed over the investigation to the coroner's office and TSB.

Missing mid-afternoon

The plane from Arctic Sunwest Charters in Yellowknife was reported missing Jan. 3 at 3:10 p.m. This was the last contact the base had with Watt -- the aircraft's pilot -- when he radioed to say he was making a "precautionary landing" due to bad weather and poor visibility.

Capt. Antonio Luberto with CFB Trenton Rescue Co-ordination Centre said three of the passengers aboard the downed aircraft were employees at Blachford Lake Lodge, who were flying into work.

At 10:15 a.m. Jan. 4, a Hercules aircraft from Winnipeg spotted the Cessna about 3.2 kilometres east of the lodge in bush by the lake's shoreline.

Two search and rescue technicians parachuted to the scene from the Hercules at about 11 a.m. Thursday.

NWT chief coroner Percy Kinney was at the scene Thursday for most of the day, but flew back to Yellowknife when darkness set in. The three bodies were at the scene overnight, according to Cathy Menard, NWT deputy chief coroner. They were flown to Yellowknife on Friday.

Kinney and another coroner were back at Blachford Lake early Friday assisting a team of TSB investigators.

John Lee, regional manager for the TSB, and Wray Tsuji, senior investigator for TSB, were in charge of the investigation at Blachford Lake Friday, according to board spokesperson Bill Kemp.

There was no comment from Blachford Lake Lodge or Arctic Sunwest by deadline.