'Hearts are heavy': 14 figure skaters among victims of DC plane crash

Athletes, coaches and family members were returning from a camp.

ByJack Moore and Megan Forrester ABCNews logo
Thursday, January 30, 2025 8:44PM
14 figure skaters among victims of DC plane crash
There were 64 people aboard the plane and three in the helicopter, according to officials.

WASHINGTON -- Fourteen figure skaters are among the victims of the first major commercial plane crash in the United States since 2009, officials said.



Many have come forward to share statements of grief and devastation toward those lost in the deadly crash on Wednesday, including Doug Zeghibe, the CEO and executive director for the Skating Club of Boston, who said six of the victims, including two coaches, two teenage athletes and two moms of athletes, were from the Boston club.



VIDEO: Nancy Kerrigan, Boston skating community pay tribute to those lost in DC crash


Fourteen members of the figure skating community were killed in the plane crash, six of them from the Skating Club of Boston.


"Our sport and this club have suffered a horrible loss with this tragedy," Zeghibe said. "Skating is a tight-knit community where parents and kids come together six or seven days a week to train and work together. Everyone is like family. We are devastated and completely at a loss for words."



The figure skaters and coaches returning from the recent U.S. national championships in Wichita, Kansas, were aboard the American Airlines flight that collided with a Black Hawk helicopter near Reagan National Airport on Wednesday evening, officials said. No survivors were expected in the crash, officials said Thursday. There were 64 people aboard the plane and three in the helicopter, according to officials.



Wichita Mayor Lily Wu also offered her condolences during a press conference, becoming emotional when stating there are not any survivors.



"Our hearts are heavy as a city," Wu said. "Our hearts are heavy as a city council, and we are here to provide the support needed for our community."



Zeghibe identified the skaters from the Skating Club of Boston as Jinna Ha and Spencer Lane. Ha's mother, Jin Han, and Lane's mother, Christine Lane, were also on board. Zeghibe also identified the two coaches as Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov. The two were 1994 World Pair Champions who joined the club in 2017, Zeghibe said.



There were 64 people aboard the plane and three in the helicopter, according to officials.

Vadim Naumov (left) and Evgenia Shishkova (right)
The Skating Club of Boston


"Six is a horrific number for us but we're fortunate and grateful it wasn't more than six," Zeghibe said. "This will have long reaching impacts for our skating community."



Natalya Gudin, the wife of Alexandr Kirsanov, a coach of two youth ice skaters on board the flight, said she has "lost everything." Gudin, also an ice skating coach, decided to stay home in Delaware while Kirsanov flew to Kansas for the development camp. She says she spoke with her husband as he boarded the flight on Wednesday.



"I lost my husband, I lost my students, I lost my friends," Gudin told ABC News. "I need my husband back. I need his body back."



The U.S. Figure Skating organization confirmed that "several members" of the skating community were aboard American Airlines Flight 5342, which took off from Wichita, Kansas, and collided with the helicopter as it approached Reagan National Airport shortly before 9 p.m.



"These athletes, coaches, and family members were returning home from the National Development Camp held in conjunction with the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita, Kansas," the organization said.



"We are devastated by this unspeakable tragedy and hold the victims families closely in our hearts," the organization said. "We will continue to monitor the situation and will release more information as it becomes available."



There were 60 passengers and four crew members aboard the jet and three personnel aboard the Army helicopter, which officials said was on a training flight at the time of the crash.



Officials have not publicly confirmed the number of fatalities in the crash.



At an early Thursday morning news conference, officials said they were continuing search-and-rescue operations in the icy Potomac River but did not say whether anyone had been pulled from the water alive, or confirm any deaths.



Meanwhile, Russian media reported that two Russian figure skaters were on board the American Airlines flight, and the presidential spokesman expressed condolences to the families and friends of those killed in the plane crash.



"There were other of our fellow citizens there. Bad news from Washington today," Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday morning.



Earlier, several Russian state media outlets reported that the 1994 world figure skating champions in pairs, Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, were on board the plane, though U.S. authorities have not confirmed these reports.



Oklahoma City figure skating coach Jackie Brenner was in Wichita with the skaters, coaches and officials who were aboard the flight.



"I was there on Sunday at a coaching workshop, which was the first day of U.S. figure skating development camp as they were coming into their two days of training," Brenner said. "Huge excitement in the arena and lobby of all these families."



Olympic medalist and renowned ice skater Nancy Kerrigan fought back tears as she explained the impact this incident has on the skating community, urging others to "tell people around you that you love them, because you just never know."



"Skating teaches you the main lesson in life: You get back up," Kerrigan said during a press conference Thursday. "Even when it's hard, even when you're crying, even when you're hurt. And that's what we all have to do now together."



The U.S. Figure Skating community has been struck by tragedy in a plane crash before. An entire U.S. figure skating team died in a plane crash on Feb. 15, 1961. The plane, Sabena Flight 548, was carrying the team to the World Figure Skating Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Along with the team, 16 family members, coaches and friends of the skaters died in the crash.



"Like today, 1961 was a tragic moment, it was the day the music stopped, very much like this," said longtime member of the Skating Club of Boston Paul George during a Thursday press conference. "It was a very vivid reminder of 1961. My wife tapped me on the shoulder at 6:30 (a.m.) and told me, much as my father had done 64 years ago at about the same time of day."



The last commercial plane crash in the U.S. happened on Feb. 12, 2009, when Colgan Air Flight 3407 crashed during landing near Buffalo Niagara International Airport, killing all 49 people onboard.



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