Pilot Crashes Plane into Own Home After Arrest
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Rockytop, Tennessee, USA
Posts: 5,899
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like
on
1 Post
Pilot Crashes Plane into Own Home After Arrest
Another suicidal pilot in the news. 
PAYSON, Utah -- Police confirm a pilot killed in Utah County Monday crashed the aircraft into his own residence just hours after he was arrested for a domestic violence incident.
The crash occurred at a home near 600 East Canyon Road near the mouth of Payson Canyon at 2:38 a.m. Monday.
The Utah County Sheriff's Office confirms the pilot was killed, and Payson Police later identified the deceased as 47-year-old Duane Youd.
Public records indicate Youd lives at the home where the plane crashed with his wife and that the couple bought the home last year. Payson Police confirm there have been previous domestic violence incidents at the home.
Sgt. Noemi Sandoval of the Payson Police Department said Youd was arrested after a domestic violence incident Sunday around 7:30 p.m. They said he was released on bail later that night and went home to secure some belongings and then left the residence.
Sandoval said the next thing police knew, the man had crashed a plane into his home after taking off from Spanish Fork Airport.
Youd's wife and her son were in the home at the time of the crash and escaped unharmed.
Plane crashes into house at the mouth of Payson Canyon.
"There were two individuals in the home at the time that the plane went in," Sandoval said. "They were able to get out of the home without any injuries. Obviously they were very shook up over what had happened but they weren't physically injured."
The home itself caught fire and became fully engulfed before crews arrived and extinguished the flames.
The plane was destroyed.
"There was a significant fireball, so there's not a whole lot left of the plane itself," Sandoval said.
Videos show the fireball Sandoval described as well as crews fighting the fire that engulfed the home.
https://fox13now.com/2018/08/13/one-...payson-canyon/

Police: pilot killed in Utah County crashed aircraft into his own home after arrest for domestic violence
Posted 5:58 am, August 13, 2018, by Mark Green and Scott McKane, Updated at 11:13AM, August 13, 2018PAYSON, Utah -- Police confirm a pilot killed in Utah County Monday crashed the aircraft into his own residence just hours after he was arrested for a domestic violence incident.
The crash occurred at a home near 600 East Canyon Road near the mouth of Payson Canyon at 2:38 a.m. Monday.

Public records indicate Youd lives at the home where the plane crashed with his wife and that the couple bought the home last year. Payson Police confirm there have been previous domestic violence incidents at the home.
Sgt. Noemi Sandoval of the Payson Police Department said Youd was arrested after a domestic violence incident Sunday around 7:30 p.m. They said he was released on bail later that night and went home to secure some belongings and then left the residence.
Sandoval said the next thing police knew, the man had crashed a plane into his home after taking off from Spanish Fork Airport.
Youd's wife and her son were in the home at the time of the crash and escaped unharmed.

"There were two individuals in the home at the time that the plane went in," Sandoval said. "They were able to get out of the home without any injuries. Obviously they were very shook up over what had happened but they weren't physically injured."
The home itself caught fire and became fully engulfed before crews arrived and extinguished the flames.
The plane was destroyed.
"There was a significant fireball, so there's not a whole lot left of the plane itself," Sandoval said.
Videos show the fireball Sandoval described as well as crews fighting the fire that engulfed the home.
https://fox13now.com/2018/08/13/one-...payson-canyon/
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: New York City
Posts: 49
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/utah-pl...ay-2018-08-13/
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Rockytop, Tennessee, USA
Posts: 5,899
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like
on
1 Post
Thanks. Looks like Mr. Youd was indeed a professional pilot.
According to the FAA database he had an ATP with CE-525S, CE-560XL and CL-65 type ratings, the last two SIC only.
According to a Facebook posting he used to work for Endeavor Air.
According to the FAA database he had an ATP with CE-525S, CE-560XL and CL-65 type ratings, the last two SIC only.
According to a Facebook posting he used to work for Endeavor Air.
Given the circumstances, I am rather surprised to see an intact wing and tailpane, which all suggest a relatively low energy impact. Did he land and roll into the house... ?
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Middle America
Age: 83
Posts: 1,167
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Andrasz,
In response to your question, at 2:30 am in darkness, he managed to miss some power lines but hit a car parked in front of the house on the street. That probably erased some of the speed when he impacted the house. It looked like the car was turned on its side, so he hit it reasonably hard.
In response to your question, at 2:30 am in darkness, he managed to miss some power lines but hit a car parked in front of the house on the street. That probably erased some of the speed when he impacted the house. It looked like the car was turned on its side, so he hit it reasonably hard.
Last edited by Turbine D; 13th Aug 2018 at 20:29. Reason: word correction
Imo.
No pilot, even when committing suicide, wants to impact nose first. Without exception, they will level, even if it makes no difference on flight path. Pancake preferred over lawn dart. The house front door is still on its hinges.
How do you know this? The experience in 1941 indicates the opposite.
Addend. From the P-47 flight manual. “When ditching, DO NOT STALL. NEVER STALL...” Seems most pilots wanted to pull. Even in 1940?
Some notable points in those (and other) photos:
- right wing is rotated back and under the fuselage (in bottom picture post #2 of man crouching, he's almost "sitting" on the leading edge)
- bottom of garage door smashed in, yet wing is still 6-8 feet in front of it (firemen cut it open to get a stream on the fire? Wing hit door and bounced back?)
- no gouges or other marks at all on asphalt street
- aircraft nose appears to have penetrated a large living room window - which may have saved the rest of the wall structure.
- front porch, except for burn-through, seems to be structurally complete. Aircraft went in "under" it without contact.
- there appears to be one small notch cut in the roof edge of the garage across the street, visible in post #11 photo, in line with final aircraft position. A bigger version of that same photo shows the notch more clearly, with broken shingles scattered down the roof below it. Yet the chimney 10-15 feet left, and taller, seems untouched.
- right wing is rotated back and under the fuselage (in bottom picture post #2 of man crouching, he's almost "sitting" on the leading edge)
- bottom of garage door smashed in, yet wing is still 6-8 feet in front of it (firemen cut it open to get a stream on the fire? Wing hit door and bounced back?)
- no gouges or other marks at all on asphalt street
- aircraft nose appears to have penetrated a large living room window - which may have saved the rest of the wall structure.
- front porch, except for burn-through, seems to be structurally complete. Aircraft went in "under" it without contact.
- there appears to be one small notch cut in the roof edge of the garage across the street, visible in post #11 photo, in line with final aircraft position. A bigger version of that same photo shows the notch more clearly, with broken shingles scattered down the roof below it. Yet the chimney 10-15 feet left, and taller, seems untouched.
Some notable points in those (and other) photos:
- right wing is rotated back and under the fuselage (in bottom picture post #2 of man crouching, he's almost "sitting" on the leading edge)
- bottom of garage door smashed in, yet wing is still 6-8 feet in front of it (firemen cut it open to get a stream on the fire? Wing hit door and bounced back?)
- no gouges or other marks at all on asphalt street
- aircraft nose appears to have penetrated a large living room window - which may have saved the rest of the wall structure.
- front porch, except for burn-through, seems to be structurally complete. Aircraft went in "under" it without contact.
- there appears to be one small notch cut in the roof edge of the garage across the street, visible in post #11 photo, in line with final aircraft position. A bigger version of that same photo shows the notch more clearly, with broken shingles scattered down the roof below it. Yet the chimney 10-15 feet left, and taller, seems untouched.
- right wing is rotated back and under the fuselage (in bottom picture post #2 of man crouching, he's almost "sitting" on the leading edge)
- bottom of garage door smashed in, yet wing is still 6-8 feet in front of it (firemen cut it open to get a stream on the fire? Wing hit door and bounced back?)
- no gouges or other marks at all on asphalt street
- aircraft nose appears to have penetrated a large living room window - which may have saved the rest of the wall structure.
- front porch, except for burn-through, seems to be structurally complete. Aircraft went in "under" it without contact.
- there appears to be one small notch cut in the roof edge of the garage across the street, visible in post #11 photo, in line with final aircraft position. A bigger version of that same photo shows the notch more clearly, with broken shingles scattered down the roof below it. Yet the chimney 10-15 feet left, and taller, seems untouched.
That makes the damage caused by LMG? Couldn’t be wing tip, that makes the path too far right?
The orientation of the right wing as you describe might indicate the a/c was rolled to the right, and dropped onto the folded under right wing , righting itself? Might be getting a bit too far ahead of myself here.
Last edited by Concours77; 14th Aug 2018 at 06:05.
My gut says a pilot intent on self-destruction wouldn't bother putting the gear down. But maybe out of habit, or to silence a warning horn...?
The CJ1 has rather short gear - not sure how gear could hit the roof that low, while the left wing cleared all the higher structures. But perhaps right bank.
I expect there is a connection between the broken right wing and the automobile flipped onto the sidewalk - with or without a bank.
The CJ1 has rather short gear - not sure how gear could hit the roof that low, while the left wing cleared all the higher structures. But perhaps right bank.
I expect there is a connection between the broken right wing and the automobile flipped onto the sidewalk - with or without a bank.
pif
My gut says a pilot intent on self-destruction wouldn't bother putting the gear down. But maybe out of habit, or to silence a warning horn...?
The CJ1 has rather short gear - not sure how gear could hit the roof that low, while the left wing cleared all the higher structures. But perhaps right bank.
I expect there is a connection between the broken right wing and the automobile flipped onto the sidewalk - with or without a bank.
The CJ1 has rather short gear - not sure how gear could hit the roof that low, while the left wing cleared all the higher structures. But perhaps right bank.
I expect there is a connection between the broken right wing and the automobile flipped onto the sidewalk - with or without a bank.
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: apogee
Age: 68
Posts: 69
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Very strange photos of the scene. House seems still structurally sound. Not much of a fire or impact. The landscaping is hardly disturbed. The utility box out front looks pristine. No scrapes or gouges on the road. The sidewalk curb still there. No debris in street. This was a twin jet.
Looks more like it was dropped by a crane onto the driveway and went boom.
Looks more like it was dropped by a crane onto the driveway and went boom.