Santee

Timeline: The Deadly Santee Plane Crash in East San Diego County

A look at the key events in the deadly plane crash in Santee, California, on Oct. 11, 2021

NBC Universal, Inc.

NBC 7’s Rory Devine breaks down what happened in the deadly Santee Plane Crash Monday

The fiery plane crash in Santee, California, on Oct. 11, 2021, left two people dead and destroyed two homes. The crash jolted a quiet, tight-knit neighborhood, sending residents into the streets to help each other when it counted the most. But what happened? Here's a timeline of the key events both during the crash and the aftermath.

Oct. 11, 2021
It was Monday, right around lunchtime, in a neighborhood on Greencastle Street at Jeremy Street near Santana High School in Santee.

Just before 12:15 p.m., some residents began hearing the sounds of a plane's engine. It wasn't necessarily uncommon for the area; the neighborhood is not far from Gillespie Field, a small airport in El Cajon. Airplanes fly around Santee all the time.

Only this time, the sounds were different.

They were loud, residents said. They felt so close.

And this plane, it wasn't headed to Gillespie Field.

The twin-engine Cessna C340 was headed to San Diego from Yuma, Arizona, and was supposed to land at Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport in Kearny Mesa.

Piloting the aircraft was cardiologist Dr. Sugata Das, a doctor at the Yuma Regional Medical Center. He worked at the YRMC but lived in San Diego, flying back and forth frequently. He was an experienced pilot.

Dr. Sugata Das was a cardiologist at Yuma Regional Medical Center and was piloting the plane that crashed in Santee, reports NBC 7's Allie Raffa

Just before 12:15 p.m., Das began communicating with Air Traffic Control. He was about a minute away from reaching his destination at Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport. Das looped his Cessna to the right, perhaps in an attempt to divert to Gillespie Field, although that part, as of Oct. 13, remained under investigation.

Once the plane veered off course, an air traffic controller tried to contact Das, referring to his tail number as "gulf" or "22 gulf."

In audio from that exchange, a controller can be heard telling Das that his plane is too low.

"Gulf, it looks like you're drifting right of course. Are you correcting? Correcting 22 gulf," the controller said. “Low altitude alert; climb immediately. Climb the airplane."

Low altitude alert; climb immediately. Climb the airplane.

Air Traffic Controller, to Dr. Das, seconds before the crash

The controller repeatedly urged the plane to climb to 5,000 feet. When Das' plane remained at 1,500 feet, the controller warned the pilot: “You appear to be descending again, sir.”

Moments after the communication, at around 12:15 p.m., Das' plane crashed into the Santee neighborhood at Greencastle and Jeremy streets.

Several home security cameras belonging to locals captured the plane nosediving into the residential area.

A balcony security camera recorded the moment a small plane crashed into a San Diego neighborhood just blocks from a high school, killing at least two people and destroying several homes.

The wing of his plane clipped a UPS truck that was nearing a stop sign. This killed the driver of the UPS truck, OB resident Steve Krueger. Das was also killed in the crash.

A friend of Krueger told NBC 7 the longtime UPS employee loved the snow and the outdoors and had recently bought a home near Mammoth Lakes. He was just months away from retirement, the friend said, and had planned to spend much of his time enjoying his new home.

Several others were injured and two homes were destroyed, including that of Cody and Courtney Campbell, a newlywed couple who had bought their home on Greencastle Street just five months ago. At least another five homes were damaged.

Cody and Courtney Campbell were at work when a small plane came crashing down on their home on Greencastle Street in Santee, reports NBC 7's Dana Griffin

Witnesses said after hitting Krueger’s UPS truck, the fuselage of the plane slid toward two homes – the second home belonging to Phil and Maria Morris. The homes exploded in the fiery impact of the crash.

The Morrises were inside their house, watching TV in their living room when, suddenly, the plane slammed into their home.

Neighbors ran to help, describing how they got the couple out of the home in those seconds after the crash.

The Morrises survived and were hospitalized. As of Oct. 14, they were still recovering at the hospital but their son said the couple was in good spirits, eternally grateful for the quick actions of their neighbors.

The Campbells' home -- was empty at the time of the plane crash. Owners Cody and Courtney Campbell had both been at work and were not hurt. Even their dog survived; about two hours before the crash, Courtney Campbell's mother had picked up their dog, Mister, from the home.

Firefighters rushed to the scene as smoke from the deadly crash quickly blanketed the neighborhood. The sirens from emergency crews rushing to the scene could be heard for miles.

They didn't stop blaring for hours.

The crash site, as the Morrises son, Jim Slaff, told NBC 7, looked "like a war zone."

NBC 7
Drone footage shows two homes destroyed in the Santee plane crash. A blackened mark on the street shows where a UPS delivery truck engulfed in flames.
NBC 7
A closer look at the debris left at what was once a Santee home.
NBC 7
A look at one of the two Santee homes that was destroyed in the Oct. 11, 2021 crash.
NBC 7
Aerial footage from an NBC 7 drone captures the devastation brought upon a Santee, California neighborhood by a plane crash that rocked the neighborhood on Monday, Oct. 11, 2021.
AP Photo/Gregory Bull
Fire crews work the scene of a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
AP Photo/Gregory Bull
Fire crews work the scene of a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
AP Photo/Gregory Bull
A fire official looks over the scene of a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
SkyRanger 7
An aerial view of the homes destroyed after a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
AP Photo/Gregory Bull
People watch emergency crews from the roof of a home at the scene of a plane crash in a neighborhood Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
AP Photo/Gregory Bull
Fire crews work the scene of a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
SkyRanger 7
Firefighters on the scene after a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
Artie Ojeda
A house burning after a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
SkyRanger 7
An aerial view of the homes destroyed after a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
NBC 7
Debris at the scene after a small plane crash, Monday, Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, Calif.
Elroy Spatcher/NBC 7
The scene of the aftermath of the plane crash in Santee, California, on Oct. 13, 2021.
Elroy Spatcher/NBC 7
The scene of the aftermath of the plane crash in Santee, California, on Oct. 13, 2021.
Flowers left at the scene of the plane crash in Santee, California, on Oct. 13, 2021.
Yuma Regional Medical Center
Dr. Saguta Das worked at the Yuma Regional Medical Center
Jeff Krueger
An undated image of Steve Krueger, the UPS employee who died Monday, Oct. 12, 2021 when a small aircraft crashed in Santee.
Jeff Krueger
An undated image of Steve Krueger water skiing. Krueger was working his UPS route on Oct. 11, 2021, in Santee, California, when a plane crashed into a neighborhood, killing him.
Jeff Krueger
UPS employee and Ocean Beach resident Steve Krueger poses with Mammoth Mountain mascot Woolly Mammoth in this undated image.
Courtney and Cody Campbell/GoFundMe
The home of Cody and Courtney Campbell in Santee, California, was one of two houses destroyed when a small plane crashed in their neighborhood on Oct. 11, 2021.

October 12, 2021:

The next day, investigators continued to comb through the crash site.

For now, the answers as to how or why the deadly crash happened, remain unknown.

The NTSB spokesperson said a preliminary report on the investigators' findings is expected to publish Oct. 26.

A transportation investigator is expected to arrive in Santee to begin an investigation into the deadly East County plane crash that killed two people and badly burned two others.

Also on Oct. 12, officials released the name of Krueger, the UPS driver killed in the crash. He had worked at UPS for more than 30 years and was on the verge of retirement at the time of his death.

Friends remembered Krueger fondly.

Steve Krueger, who worked for UPS for more than three decades, had just purchased a house near Mammoth Lakes, reports NBC 7's Artie Ojeda

Also on Oct. 12, NBC 7 was able to speak with Cody and Courtney Campbell, the owners of one of the two homes destroyed in the tragedy. They were grateful they weren't hurt and even more grateful for the support of the community rallying around them.


Oct. 13, 2021:

While the investigation into the deadly plane crash continued, the final debris of the wreckage was cleared from the streets of Santee, allowing for all roadways to reopen on the evening of Oct. 13. Fencing still cordoned the homes that were destroyed by the explosion from the crash.

Some purple and white flowers had been tied to a post near the crash site.

NBC 7 learned a vigil was being planned for Krueger Thursday evening NEAR the crash site.

NBC 7 is working to gather the latest details on the Santee plane crash. Check back for updates as this story develops.

Oct. 14
New drone video captured the devastation of the Santee plane crash along Greencastle Street.

New drone video shows the utter devastation left on Greencastle Street in Santee, California, after a deadly plane crash killed two people and destroyed two homes. NBC 7's Audra Stafford shares the latest from the scene, including details on a vigil planned for Thursday night.

The vigil for Krueger is set to be held from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on Oct. 14 near the crash site.

Exit mobile version