Wife Survives, Severely Injured In Saturday Accident
The pilot of a Lancair Legacy was killed, and his passenger
critically injured, when the aircraft crashed for unknown reasons
Saturday afternoon in southern Utah.

The Salt Lake Tribune reports William Phillips and his wife,
Janice, took off from Parowan Airport (IL9) bound for Las Vegas,
NV. Initial reports state the aircraft experienced mechanical
trouble soon thereafter.
Iron County Sheriff Mark Gower said the aircraft crashed about
one mile north of the runway, at around 1:45 pm local time
Saturday. Gower said it appears the pilot was attempting to return
to the airport when the aircraft (shown below) crashed.
"It looks like it came in nose first," Gower said. "At this
point, it is speculated that the crash was caused by mechanical
failure."

Investigator Tony Gower told the St. George Daily Spectrum the
aircraft largely disintegrated on impact. "It didn't burn, but the
plane hit the ground at a high rate of speed," he said.
Local reports state Bill Phillips survived the initial crash,
but later died at the scene. His wife was airlifted to a hospital
in Murray, UT with broken bones and internal injuries. She is
presently listed in critical condition.
The FAA and NTSB were on the scene Sunday to conduct parallel
investigations into the accident.
IDENTIFICATION
Regis#:
151HT Make/Model:
EXP Description: LANCAIR
LEGACY
Date: 10/18/2008 Time: 1903
Event Type: Accident Highest Injury:
Fatal Mid Air: N Missing:
N
Damage: Destroyed
LOCATION
City: PAROWAN State: UT Country:
US
DESCRIPTION
AIRCRAFT CRASHED UNDER UNKNOWN CIRCUMSTANCES, THERE WERE TWO
PERSONS ON
BOARD, ONE WAS FATALLY INJURED, AND ONE SUSTAINED SERIOUS
INJURIES,
PAROWAN, UT
INJURY DATA Total
Fatal: 1
# Crew: 1 Fat:
1 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
# Pass: 1 Fat:
0 Ser:
1 Min:
0 Unk:
# Grnd:
Fat: 0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
WEATHER: CDC 181953Z METAR AUTO 17010G21KT 10SM CLR 23/M07
A3021
OTHER DATA
Activity: Unknown Phase:
Unknown Operation: OTHER
FAA FSDO: SALT LAKE CITY, UT
(NM07)
Entry date: 10/20/2008
E-I-C Note: I hate this.One of the tragedies of
aviation is that the boundless joys of flight are occasionally
tempered by tragedies of incalculable measure.
The Bill Phillips involved in this story is my friend, "Badwater
Bill." An accomplished aviator and a person with more opinions than
any ten people I know, losing Bill at the "tender" age of 59 is a
huge low... and leaves me looking for the right thing to say... and
not finding it.
Bill and I started our friendship in the worst possible way (NOT
as friends) and through a ponderous series of events, came to value
the common bond that ties flyers together... as well as the amazing
discourses we ventured upon at various times. Over time, we became
really good buddies and got involved in some truly wild
shenanigans. Bill was possibly the most unique personality I have
ever met, an amazing mind and an irascible old coot who once made
me promise that if I ever had to write his obit, that I had to be
sure to tell everyone what a 'rat bast*rd' he was.
I can't do it.
Aviation is an amazing community, for all manner
of reasons... but it is the variety of personalities that
flock to it that are potentially its greatest resource... and Bill
was easily one of the most remarkable souls I've ever met.
I'll miss him like hell... and the one thing I can promise is
that I'll never forget him. We offer his wife, Janice, our
sincere wishes for a full and speedy recovery and our prayers that
the days ahead are somewhat softened by the fact there were a lot
of people who liked/loved Bill, or were amused by Bill and/or
couldn't forget Bill if they tried (and yeah, I think he'd like
that description).
Fair winds, Bill... it was a privilege to know ya... -- Jim
Campbell, ANN E-I-C.