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The crash
A single-engine plane carrying four local men crashed at Stafford Regional Airport late Feb. 22, 2006, killing all four men aboard, including:
Rick Potter, 49, the pilot and owner of Potter Homes. He was a deacon at Fredericksburg Baptist Church, a member of the Stafford Rotary Club, a volunteer with the local Habitat for Humanity and a pilot for Angel Flight America, a Virginia Beach-based operation that gives free rides to patients in need of distant medical care. He was a married father of three.
Albert "Buck" Jacoby, 56, a lawyer with the Jacoby and Pantazis firm in Stafford and also a licensed pilot. He was a member of the Stafford Rotary, a singer in the senior choir at St. Peter's Lutheran Church in Stafford and a tennis player. He was married with four children and one grandson.
Graham Green III, 57, a Stafford resident and owner of Green and Associates Realty in Fredericksburg. He was a founding member of the Stafford Rotary Club, a musician, avid tennis player and member of the Presbyterian Church in Fredericksburg. He was a married father of four.
Michael Gus Pappas , 46, a real-estate investor and owner of Atlas Power Wash in Fredericksburg. He was a member of the Fredericksburg Rod & Gun Club and enjoyed target shooting and skeet shooting. He frequently visited yard sales, looking to add to his antique toy collection. He liked to bike ride, hike and camp with his wife and two children.
The Feb. 22 flight
4 p.m. The group left Shannon Airport in Spotsylvania in Potter's Columbia 400 aircraft to attend the Wake Forest-Clemson basketball game in North Carolina.
10 p.m. After enjoying an overtime Wake Forest victory, the group departed Winston-Salem, headed back to Shannon Airport.
11:37 p.m. Fog and low clouds made visibility difficult, and Potter requested to land instead at the Stafford Regional Airport, which is larger and has more updated equipment.
11:40 p.m. The plane was last seen on radar.
Feb. 23, 12:45 a.m. Police began looking for the plane after it didn't land.
9:11 a.m. The aircraft was found about a quarter-mile from the airport runway, where it apparently struck some trees and crashed. The National Transportation Safety Board is still investigating the cause of the accident.
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