Pilot Lost In Takeoff And Landing Drills
ANN REALTIME UPDATE 07.16.07 1720
EDT: Officials have released the name of the
pilot of a P-51D Mustang who died in a Sunday morning accident at
Camarillo Airport.

John McKittrick, 42, was at the controls when the
warbird crashed at 0815 PDT Sunday morning. Sources tell ANN
McKittrick had "several hundred" flight hours in other types of
aircraft, though this was his first time soloing the P-51.
Eyewitnesses tell ANN the accident occurred
during McKittrick's first landing attempt, when the aircraft
began porposing on landing, and the pilot tried to stop the plane
before running off the runway.
FAA spokesman Mike Fergus told the Fresno Bee the McKittrick's
flight instructor "told the tower that the student pilot was going
to make patterns" before the accident.
The accident occurred Sunday morning at 0820 local time.
IDENTIFICATION
Regis#: 51TK
Make/Model: P51 Description:
P-51, F-51, A-36 Mustang
Date: 07/15/2007 Time: 1505
Event Type: Accident Highest Injury:
Fatal Mid Air: N Missing:
N
Damage: Substantial
LOCATION
City: CAMARILLO State: CA Country:
US
DESCRIPTION
AIRCRAFT ON LANDING, CRASHED AND CAME TO REST INVERTED, THE
ONE PERSON ON
BOARD WAS FATALLY INJURED, CAMARILLO, CA
INJURY DATA Total
Fatal: 1
# Crew: 1 Fat:
1 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
# Pass: 0 Fat:
0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
# Grnd:
Fat: 0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
WEATHER: NOT REPORTED
OTHER DATA
Activity: Training Phase:
Landing Operation: OTHER
FAA FSDO: VAN NUYS, CA
(WP01)
Entry date: 07/16/2007
Original Report
An early Sunday practice flight at Southern California's
Camarillo airport has ended tragically for the new pilot of a P-51D
Mustang. According to media and eyewitness reports, the aircraft
was engaged in takeoff and landing transitions when the aircraft
went down just after 0815, Pacific time.

The as yet unidentified Thousand Oaks California pilot, 42, was
reportedly killed on impact. ANN News-Spy and media eyewitness
reports seem to agree that the aircraft had apparently attempted a
landing, and either bounced or ran into some issues therein and
thereafter added power to either go-around or extend the
landing when the aircraft appeared to roll-over and impact the
ground, and come to rest inverted.
Impact forces were severe, causing the aircraft airframe to come
apart, with the powerplant coming to rest several yards away from
the rest of the airframe. Media reports indicate that the aircraft
took most of the impact force along its left hand side as it rolled
over while a fair amount of the right structure appears fairly
intact.
The aircraft is identified as "LOU IV" and had recently been
seen in the air during a Camarillo Fly-In. A P-51D Mustang
nicknamed LOU IV originally served with the US 8th Air Force's
375th Fighter Squadron of the 361st Fighter Group in the UK.
Reports indicate that the pilot had been flying with an
instructor just prior to the accident. According to Captain Mark
Taillon, Ventura County Fire Department, the instructor disembarked
from the aircraft and notified the tower that the pilot "was doing
his first solo flight" in the aircraft. The FAA's Mike Fergus,
reported that the instructor "told the tower that the student pilot
was going to make patterns."
ANN is researching this accident and will have more information
available shortly.