Yorba Linda plane crash: Pilot was carrying false credentials that ID'd him as ex-Chicago police officer

ByABC7.com staff KABC logo
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
OC plane crash: Pilot's false credentials ID'd him as ex-cop
A pilot was carrying credentials that falsely identified him as a retired Chicago police officer when his Cessna crashed in a Yorba Linda.

YORBA LINDA, Calif. -- A pilot was carrying credentials that falsely identified him as a retired Chicago police officer when his Cessna crashed into a Yorba Linda neighborhood Sunday, killing him and four others, authorities said.



An Orange County Sheriff's Department spokesman told ABC News that the agency was contacted by the Chicago Police Department after a sheriff's lieutenant, speaking at a Monday news conference, described the pilot as a former officer.



RELATED: Residents hosting Super Bowl party when small plane crashed into Yorba Linda home



It was not immediately clear why the man, identified as 75-year-old Antonio Pastini, was in possession of the fake credentials. According to authorities, his other identification details and his Federal Aviation Administration pilot's license are still believed to be authentic.



As of Tuesday morning, the coroner was still in the process of identifying the four badly burned victims -- two men and two women -- who were killed in a home that was struck by the plane's debris. Their conditions require additional measures -- including DNA -- to reach official identifications.



A close friend of the deceased said the family had gathered for their annual Super Bowl party when the deadly incident occurred.



RELATED: 5 people killed after small plane crash ignites house fires in Yorba Linda



The small plane ascended to about 7,800 feet before it crashed about 10 minutes after taking off from the Fullerton Municipal Airport, National Transportation Safety Board investigator Maja Smith said. Its wrecked fuselage ended up in a residential backyard.



Shawn Winch, who lives near the two-story home that erupted in an inferno, said the plummeting aircraft "sounded like a missile coming at my house."



"I got over there and the house was just engulfed in flames," he said. "Stuff was blowing up in the garage and everything else. It was horrible."

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