The wreckage of a former navy jet that crashed into Port Phillip Bay final weekend, killing pilot Stephen Gale and cameraman James Rose, was pulled from the water off Mornington on Saturday morning.
After an in depth restoration mission, Victoria Police stated a crane lifted the badly broken fuselage of the sunshine S-211 Marchetti airplane, which is about 4 metres extensive and weighs a couple of tonne, from the water and took it to Port Melbourne on a barge.
Human stays, which had been found contained in the underwater wreckage on Wednesday, will probably be eliminated earlier than the Australian Transport Security Bureau examines the plane additional.
Gale, a pilot, engineer, inventor and aspiring filmmaker, and Rose, a gifted cameraman and drone operator, died after a midair collision with one other jet about 12 kilometres west of Mount Martha, in Melbourne’s south-east on Sunday afternoon. They had been filming for a documentary sequence that deliberate to show individuals with no expertise the right way to fly.
“Police divers have carried out in depth searches and have been working to recuperate the plane because it was found earlier this week,” police stated in an announcement on Saturday.
“Investigators are working to ascertain the precise circumstances of the incident and investigations stay ongoing.”
The opposite airplane concerned landed safely at Essendon airport shortly after the collision. Police stated they’d interviewed the pilot of that airplane.
Gale, who had served within the RAAF and was the proprietor of the 2 jets, was the brains behind the proposed documentary sequence the pair had been filming, referred to as Jet Faculty.