ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Five members of a vacationing South Carolina family were among those killed in a fiery Alaska plane crash that left all 10 on board dead.
The Antonakos family of Greenville, S.C., usually went to Myrtle Beach, S.C., each summer, but the father of Kimberly Antonakos said Monday his daughter and her family decided to travel to Alaska for 10 days this year instead.
"They were very excited," H. Wayne Clayton said. "They never had been there before and wanted to see what it was like."
Clayton said his son-in-law Melet Antonakos sold computer software to hospitals and doctors' offices, while Kimberly shuffled the three children to their many activities. The children were 16-year-old Olivia, 14-year-old Mills and 11-year-old Anastacia.
"It's rough, to lose five (family) members at one time, Clayton said.
South Carolina House Majority Leader Bruce Bannister said the other victims were also a family from Greenville, S.C. — Chris McManus and Stacey McManus and their two children.
Investigators have begun their probe into the crash of a de Havilland DHC3 Otter that crashed and burned shortly after 11 a.m. Sunday at the airport in Soldotna, about 75 miles southwest of Anchorage. The plane had just taken off and apparently was en route to a fishing lodge, according to National Transportation Safety Board investigator Clint Johnson.
Bannister said the Antonakos family lived on his street in Greenville. Bannister said the families watched each other's dogs and checked the mail when each was on vacation. Olivia was going to be in 11th grade, Mills was going to be in ninth grade and Anna was going to be in sixth grade next year, he said.