In what has to be a very strange death, 55-year-old Dana J. Hyde died as an apparent result of turbulence aboard a jet flying over New England on Friday. She was an attorney that served the Clinton and Obama administrations and was a member of the 9/11 Commission, as well as a part-time consultant for the Aspen Institute.
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Around 4 p.m. on Friday, a Bombardier CL30 aircraft that had taken off from Dillant-Hopkins Airport in Keene, New Hampshire, and was en route to Leesburg Executive Airport in Virginia was forced to make an emergency landing. On the private business plane that was redirected to the Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, rough turbulence claimed one life, according to aviation authorities.
The Connecticut State Troopers, one of the organizations looking into Friday’s forced landing at Bradley International Airport have identified the person as Dana J. Hyde.
The private jet was carrying three passengers and two crew members, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said in a statement to CNN.
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In a statement of their own, Conexon revealed that Hyde was the spouse of Conexon partner Jonathan Chambers and that the firm owned the aircraft involved in the tragedy. According to Conexon, Chambers and his kid were on the flight but escaped the situation unharmed.
While the FBI and National Transportation Safety Board look into what went down on the Bombardier executive jet, Hyde’s remnants are with the Connecticut Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
“Investigators have removed the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder and are continuing to gather information from the flight crew, operator, and other passengers,” the NTSB wrote in its statement.
The Daily Mail adds:
Others onboard included Hyde’s husband and son, as well as two crew members – all of whom survived. The family had reportedly been heading back to their home in Cabin John, Maryland when the turbulence unexpectedly hit.
The plane had been traveling from Keene, New Hampshire, before diverting to Bradley, where the high-profile attorney was rushed to a hospital and pronounced dead.
In a statement Monday that offered insight into authorities’ ongoing probe into the ex-White House staffer’s death – which is also being investigated by the FBI – the Connecticut State Troopers confirmed the private aircraft belonged to a company headed by Hyde’s spouse, Jonathan Chambers.
Article posted with permission from Sons of Liberty Media












