ANCHORAGE — A small plane that’s missing in Alaska with four people on board was rented by a pilot described as a man who makes good decisions, the individual who handled the transaction said Thursday.
Nate Sobie, manager of the True North Aviation flight school in Port Alsworth who rented the plane to the party, declined to identify those on board. Sobie said he has been assisting in the search for the Piper PA-28 Cherokee as well.
“The one comment I would have is, just let me ask everyone for prayers at this time as we search for the missing people and that they can return safely home,” he said.
The plane left Port Alsworth about 10 a.m. Wednesday and was due around noon in Anchorage 170 miles to the northeast.
Responders say the search has been hampered by fog and darkness at Lake Clark Pass, a narrow river valley believed to be part of the aircraft’s flight path.
The missing plane is owned by Glen Alsworth Sr. and his family, but it’s on loan to the aviation business. Alsworth said the community of about 200 was named after his family, adding that his father homesteaded there in 1944.
Responders also have not released the names of the people on board.
Searchers found no indication of any emergency locator beacon being activated in the area, Alaska Air National Guard Staff Sgt. Edward Eagerton said.
Night was falling when the search was launched late Wednesday with an HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter and two C-130 transport planes, he said. Beside the darkness, searchers ran into fog at Lake Clark Pass.
“Imagine you’re flying in a valley between mountains that are covered in snow and then it’s foggy,” he said. “Eventually, you lose the ability to know how close you are to things. It makes it dangerous to fly in those conditions to get low enough.”
Responders in the overnight search instead focused their attention on the areas on both sides of the pass.
The search was resumed at first light Thursday. The search includes a helicopter, C-130 and Civil Air Patrol aircraft, Eagerton said.