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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Two rescued from float plane crash in Hayden Lake

Rescue workers survey the site of an airplane that flipped about a mile from shore  on Hayden Lake at Honeysuckle Beach. That part of the lake is about 200 feet deep. (Kathy Plonka)
Two men in a float plane were rescued by workers at the Hayden Lake Marina this morning after the plane flipped over in the lake. An instructor and a student were in the plane and forgot to pull up the aircraft’s wheels before landing, according to Kootenai County Sheriff’s spokesman Maj. Ben Wolfinger. The student and owner of the plane – Michael Bell, 61, of Spokane – was flying. The passenger and instructor was Michael Kinkaid, 62, of Coeur d’Alene, a news release from the sheriff’s office said. The men had taken off from the Coeur d’Alene airport. The accident was reported at 9:38 a.m. Workers at the marina witnessed the accident and headed out in a fishing boat to pull the men out of the water. Neither man was wearing a life jacket and the lake’s water temperatures were in the 40s, Wolfinger said. The pilot and passenger were taken to a private residence near Honeysuckle Beach to warm up. The plane flipped about a mile from the lakeshore at the Honeysuckle boat launch, near the old Tobler Marina site, he said. That part of the lake is about 200 feet deep. The plane is a Murphy Rebel 180 horsepower two-seater. The Northern Lakes Fire Department used absorption pads to soak up fuel leaking from the plane. The Federal Aviation Administration has been notified. Crews were working this afternoon to flip the plane upright and get it out of the lake, the release said.