Last moments recounted of official killed in crash

Hawaii state Health Department Director Loretta Fuddy and Gov. Neil Abercrombie pose for a photo March 21. Fuddy was aboard a small plane carrying nine people that crashed into the ocean Wednesday off the Hawaiian island of Molokai, officials said. Fuddy died in the crash. The eight others onboard, including the pilot, survived.
Hawaii state Health Department Director Loretta Fuddy and Gov. Neil Abercrombie pose for a photo March 21. Fuddy was aboard a small plane carrying nine people that crashed into the ocean Wednesday off the Hawaiian island of Molokai, officials said. Fuddy died in the crash. The eight others onboard, including the pilot, survived.

HONOLULU (AP) - In the final moments of her life, Hawaii Health Director Loretta Fuddy clung to the hand of her deputy after a small plane taking them back to Honolulu crashed in the ocean off the island of Molokai.

Fuddy, who gained notoriety in 2011 for her role in making public the birth certificate of President Obama, was one of nine people onboard the flight that went down Wednesday. She was the only one who died.

In the water, Fuddy held hands with deputy director Keith Yamamoto as he tried to help her relax, said the Rev. Patrick Killilea, who consoled Yamamoto after the ordeal.

"He recounted how he said he helped Loretta into her life jacket and he held her hand for some time," the priest said. "They were all floating together and she let go and there was no response from her."

The crash occurred when the single engine of the 2002 Cessna Grand Caravan failed soon after it took off from Molokai and made its turn toward Honolulu, said Richard Schuman, owner of Makani Kai Air, operator of the plane.

Schuman said the pilot did his best to get the plane down safely and keep the passengers together in the waters off Molokai. Asked how they survived, he responded: "Will."

"There's only one engine on that plane and when it quits on you, you just have to deal with it in that moment," he said.

Life jackets were instrumental in saving the lives of people on the plane, said Coast Guard Lt. Kevin Cooper, who helped coordinate the rescue effort from Oahu.

"In a survival situation like this, we do encourage people to stay together," he said.

Three passengers were pulled from the water by a Coast Guard helicopter, and Maui fire crews picked up others. One person swam ashore.

Other details remained sketchy Thursday on how the 65-year-old Fuddy was killed and how the others survived.

Schuman said he did not yet know why the engine failed because he has not been able to see the plane. The aircraft had no previous problems, he said.

Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said investigators planned to speak with the pilot, whose name was not released, and some passengers about the crash as they seek more details.

However, the location of the wreckage, combined with wind and wave conditions, likely means it won't be recovered.

Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie said Fuddy was loved and respected.

"Her knowledge was vast, her counsel and advice always given from her heart as much as from her storehouse of experience," he said.

Fuddy approved the release of the president's long-form birth certificate after he and his personal attorney wrote to her to make it public and relieve the state of the burden that came with repeated inquiries about the document.

Fuddy said then that she had viewed the records on Obama that "further prove the fact that he was born in Hawaii."

Fuddy spent more than 30 years working in health and human services and had been health director since March 2011. Most recently, she led the department as it transitioned its marriage license system to allow gay couples to wed under a new law.

After the crash, Fuddy's body was taken to a care home at Kalaupapa, where Killilea, the pastor of Kalaupapa's St. Francis Church, said he made the sign of the cross on her forehead as she lay on a gurney surrounded by nurses and the distraught Yamamoto.

An autopsy was pending and the cause of her death had not yet been determined.

Three survivors were transported by helicopter to a Honolulu hospital; two declined to be medically evacuated; and three were taken to Molokai General Hospital with minor injuries, officials said.

Molokai hospital staff helped them dry their clothing and gave them a place to rest until they could get rooms at the island's only hotel, hospital Vice President Randy Lite said. They checked out of the hotel early Thursday.

No further information was available on the other passengers or the pilot.

Fuddy and Yamamoto were on the flight after an annual visit to Kalaupapa, where the state exiled leprosy patients until 1969. The area is accessible only by plane or mule.

The leprosy settlement on Kalaupapa is still run by the state health department, though only a few former leprosy patients continue to live there.

The NTSB had no records of accidents for Makani Kai Air dating back to 1962, while the FAA had records of only two minor incidents that resulted in no injuries.

In 2012, a piece of trash got caught in a helicopter causing the pilot to abort takeoff. In 1998, a pilot heard a noise in the main rotor and landed in an open field with no injuries.

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