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Seven-Year-Old Girl Survives Kentucky Plane Crash


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KUTTAWA, Ky.—A 7-year-old girl who survived a plane crash in Kentucky that killed her parents and two other family members has been released from the hospital, police said on Saturday.

Kentucky State Police Sgt. Dean Patterson also said officials from the Federal Aviation Administration have arrived at the scene to try to determine why the small Piper PA-34 crashed as it was flying over in rural southwestern Kentucky early on Friday evening.

The plane had reported engine trouble and lost contact with air-traffic controllers shortly before the 5:55 p.m. CST crash, authorities said. About a half-hour later, a man called in the emergency and told dispatchers that a 7-year-old girl had walked to his home in Kuttawa, Ky., and said she had been involved in a plane crash.

The girl had walked nearly a mile through thick brush in temperatures that were less than 40 degrees Fahrenheit before reaching the home of 71-year-old Larry Wilkins.

I come to the door and there’s a little girl, seven years old, bloody nose, bloody arms, bloody legs, one sock, no shoes, crying,” Mr. Wilkins told The Associated Press in an interview on Saturday. “She told me that her mom and dad were dead, and she had been in a plane crash, and the plane was upside down.”

The girl was treated at Lourdes Hospital in Paducah, Kentucky and released early on Saturday, Sgt. Patterson said.

“This girl came out of the wreckage herself and found the closest residence and reported the plane crash,” Sgt. Patterson said. “It’s a miracle in a sense that she survived it, but it’s tragic that four others didn’t.”

Sgt. Patterson said the girl was the daughter of the two adults who died in the crash, Marty Gutzler, 48, and his wife, Kimberly Gutzler, 46. Also killed in the crash were the girl’s sister, Piper Gutzler, 9, and a cousin, Sierra Wilder, 14. All were from Nashville, Illinois. The bodies have been recovered and sent to Louisville for autopsies.

In Nashville, a man stepped outside the family’s white, split-level home on Saturday and politely waved off a reporter. “Not now,” he said, his head lowered, before he stepped back inside.

Neighbors said Marty and Kim Gutzler had lifelong roots in the largely rural southern Illinois town about 50 miles east of St. Louis. Mr. Gutzler ran the furniture store that his father started, and the couple was well-known and well-liked, said neighbor Carla Povolish. “All the kids in the neighborhood are just so upset about this,” she said.

Ms. Povolish said the two young Gutzler sisters were together constantly. “That’s what’s going to be so devastating for the little one,” she said.

The FAA said late on Friday that the plane had taken off from Tallahassee Regional Airport, in Florida, and was bound for Mount Vernon, Illinois. Sgt. Patterson said the girl who survived indicated the plane had left from Key West, Florida.

Investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board also were expected to get to the scene later on Saturday, Sgt. Patterson said.

The pastor of a church near the crash site said the area was known for rough terrain and that the conditions on Friday were wet due to persistent rain. “That area is very rough and hilly, very heavily forested with mature trees,” said the Rev. Dean Weber of the Chestnut Oak United Methodist Church in Kuttawa. “Any plane crash in that area is going to be a severe ordeal.”

 

 

I feel sorry for the girls loss of her parents and sister. Too bad.

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