Sudbury

Pilot in float plane crash on Fairbank Lake in Greater Sudbury remains missing

The pilot of a float plane that crashed in the western part of Greater Sudbury, Ont., last night remains missing after a male passenger with "minor injuries" was rescued.

Kevin Fogal and his father helped to rescue a passenger, who he says 'looked really shocked'

Kevin Fogal and his father were on Fairbank Lake in Sudbury, Ont., when the crash happened close to 8 p.m. ET on Wednesday. They helped to rescue a passenger aboard the downed float plane. (Stephany Laperriere/Radio-Canada)

A passenger rescued from a downed float plane in Greater Sudbury, Ont., on Wednesday said only two words, according to one of the men who rushed to help. 

The man "looked really shocked" and "had a couple of cuts on his forehead and one on the side his face," said Kevin Fogal, who was with his father near Fairbank Lake, in the western part of Greater Sudbury, when the crash happened at about 8 p.m. ET. 

"We heard the guy yelling," Fogal told CBC News. "So, [my father] yelled at me, and we had hopped down into the boat and drove out there."

"As we got out, he was floating on the pontoon of the plane that was separated from the plane itself, and we pulled him into the boat." 

The man said only, "My uncle — my uncle."

Pilot still missing

Greater Sudbury Police said the 32-year-old male passenger was taken to hospital with "minor injuries," but the 60-year-old pilot has not been found.

Authorities have not released any information about the people on board, nor about their relationship to one another. 

Search and rescue teams — including a C-130 Hercules and helicopter from CFB Trenton  — were sent to the scene Wednesday night. 

An underwater recovery team has resumed the search. 

Police said the plane is believed to be at the bottom of the lake in about 40 metres of water. 

The cause of the crash is under investigation.