Pilot in October Long Beach crash reported losing engine power: NTSB

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) seal is seen during the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Midair Collision Investigative Hearing on July 31, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Photo credit Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

The pilot of a small home-built aircraft that made an emergency landing in a Long Beach park in October, injuring the pilot and a woman on the ground, told federal investigators the plane lost fuel pressure then stalled, forcing him to attempt to land in the park, according to a report released Wednesday.

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The plane, a two-seater Rutan Long-EZ, crashed around 4 p.m. Oct. 21 at Heartwell Park in Long Beach. The fuselage of the plane was damaged but remained largely intact. Authorities said the plane struck a person on the ground as it came in for a landing.

According to a preliminary investigative report from the National Transportation Safety Board released Wednesday, both the woman on the ground and the pilot were seriously injured.

The pilot was not identified in the report, but the plane's tail number indicates it is owned by a retiree who lives in Rancho Palos Verdes.

According to the report, two planes flew that day from the Compton Airport to French Valley Airport in Murrieta in Riverside County. At about 3:30 p.m. that day, both pilots were flying back to Compton.

The pilot of the Rutan told NTSB investigators that the initial portion of the return flight was uneventful, but he later realized the fuel flow was dropping, although the plane's engine was continuing to run smoothly.

The pilot continued flying toward Compton, but at one point the plane's engine "throttled back," and despite efforts by the pilot to restore the fuel pressure, "the engine surged and decreased to idle, followed by a total loss of engine power," according to the report.

Investigators said the pilot tried to divert to Long Beach Airport, but the plane was gliding and descending at about 700 feet per minute. The pilot realized he was not going to reach Long Beach Airport, so he "initiated a forced landing to a nearby park."

"He stated that as he approached the park, he did not see anyone in the flight path of the airplane," according to the report. "During the forced landing to the park, the airplane struck a pedestrian. The airplane sustained substantial damage to the fuselage and both wings."

The report, which is only preliminary, does not reach any official conclusions on the cause of the engine failure or the emergency landing. A final report could take months, or even more than a year, to complete.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images