January 8, 2003: Piper PA-23-250 (N135LA), Schultz Peak, San Francisco Peaks, AZ
The flight was to operate under VFR (Visual Flight Rules) en-route at 11,500 feet, but near Flagstaff the Aztec encountered clouds that contained a mixture of ice and rain. Accumulating ice on the windshield and losing contact with the ground, Mr. Price requested an IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) clearance and land in Flagstaff. The Center Controller in Alburquerque advised the flight to maintain 11,000 feet and enter the published holding pattern southeast of the Flagstaff VOR. Mr. Price acknowledged the transmission. During this time, the Alburqurque R45 sector controller and Prescott Flight Service Station was having difficulty communicating with the Flagstaff Control Tower due to a severed fiber-optic communications/data cable. At 12:16 PM MST, having lost radar contact, the R45 sector controller asked the pilot to say altitude. There was no response and no sign of the aircraft. The Piper Aztec simply vanished.
For the next 11 days, an intense multi-agency search and rescue operation ensued covering a large 81 square mile area of Northern Arizona. Much of the search operation concentrated on the snow covered San Francisco Peaks. On January 19th, a lone hiker on 10,000 foot Schultz Peak stumbled upon the wreckage of the Piper.
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The crash site of Piper Aztec "N135LA" by aviation archaeology standards is considered a "micro site" which made locating the actual point of impact difficult. The remains of four memorial crosses helped mark the site's location, but they were heavily damaged by the recent Schultz Pass Fire that burned through the area in June 2010. Today, only a few fragments of wreckage remain at this site. The clean-up of this crash site was very thorough as compared with much older sites on the Peaks.
THE AIRCRAFT
The aircraft involved was a Piper PA-23-250 "Aztec" (N135LA). The aircraft was manufactured in 1973 with a serial number of 27-7305084. The aircraft was powered by two Lycoming TIO-541 turbocharged engines.
The plane was purchased less than a month prior of the accident by Pastor Monty Price and was registered to The Cowboy Church of the American West.THE PILOT
Pastor Monty Price, age 45, was the founder of The Cowboy Church of the American West in Odessa, Texas. A private pilot, he was rated in single and multi-engine aircraft. He also held an instrument rating. He received his multi-engine and instrument rating about a month before the accident flight.
His total time was around 445 hours with only 35 hours in multi-engine aircraft and only 12 hours in the accident aircraft.Susan Price, age 44, was a strong member of her church and community.
The Prices started their ministry as a couple, founding the Rising Sun Cowboy Church in Trinity. The couple also had a traveling ministry, sharing the gospel at junior and professional rodeos.
Coy Huffman was a cowboy preacher and rodeo announcer with Cowboy Church International. He described Susan Price, who oversaw the church music ministry, as a "precious jewel of God."THE ACCIDENT
With communications between controllers garbled due to a recent severed fiber-optic line, there was a delay in issuing the flight an IFR clearance to land at Flagstaff.
Compounding the problem was a recent frequency change that was made to the Flagstaff VOR. An expired chart with the incorrect VOR frequency was found in the aircraft wreckage.Off radar, not navigating, and not communicating their dire situation, the Price's were essentially flying blind.
In the clouds and turning in a northerly direction toward the San Francisco Peaks, the plane flew directly over 9,300 foot Mount Elden. Clearing that obstruction, their heading was taking them into the path of 10,000 foot Schultz Peak.