Tag Archives: Bell South

Bodies of American wireless executive, wife found after New Zealand plane crash

New Zealand navy divers have recovered the bodies of an American wireless executive and his wife after the plane he was piloting crashed in the South Pacific.

Eric Hertz, an experienced amateur pilot, radioed authorities March 30 to say an engine had failed on the couple’s twin-engine Beechcraft Baron. He and his wife Kathy, a university employee, had left from an airport near Auckland bound for the South Island town of Timaru.

Divers recovered a second body Sunday after recovering the first Saturday near Kawhia Harbour, about 93 miles south of Auckland. Divers also recovered plane parts from the wreckage about 184 feet below water.

Hertz, 58, had been chief executive of New Zealand‘s Two Degrees Mobile since 2009. He’d previously been chief executive at Seattle’s Zumobi and held senior positions at Western Wireless, AT&T Wireless, Bell South, CellularONE and McCaw Cellular.

In New Zealand, Hertz helped launch Two Degrees as a competitor to the dominant wireless providers, Telecom and Vodafone. The company is majority owned by Washington state-based Trilogy International, co-founded by wireless pioneer John Stanton. Two Degrees has named Trilogy’s Stewart Sherriff as interim chief executive.

Kathy Picone Hertz, 64, worked for the Auckland University of Technology, helping youth prepare for the workforce.

In a statement, the families of the couple thanked rescue teams for their efforts in the challenging ocean conditions and said they looked forward to one day understanding what happened.

“The recovery of Eric and Kathy, along with the wreckage of the aircraft, is of immense relief to us all,” the families wrote. “Knowing that they can rest together in peace and that we can say our farewells is of huge comfort at this time.”

A private memorial service has been scheduled Thursday in Auckland.

The couple is survived by daughter Ari Hertz.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bodies of American exec, wife found in New Zealand

New Zealand navy divers have recovered the bodies of American wireless executive Eric Hertz and his wife Kathy after their small plane crashed in the South Pacific.

Divers recovered a second body Sunday from the wreck of the couple’s twin-engine Beechcraft Baron at a depth of 56 meters (184 feet). They recovered the first body Saturday near Kawhia Harbour, about 150 kilometers (93 miles) south of Auckland. Divers were also able to recover pieces of the plane.

Hertz, an experienced amateur pilot, radioed authorities March 30 to say the engine had failed. The couple had left from an airport near Auckland bound for the South Island town of Timaru.

Hertz, 58, had been chief executive of New Zealand‘s Two Degrees Mobile since 2009. He’d previously been chief executive at Seattle’s Zumobi and held senior positions at Western Wireless, AT&T Wireless, Bell South, CellularONE and McCaw Cellular.

In New Zealand, Hertz helped launch Two Degrees as a competitor to the dominant wireless providers, Telecom and Vodafone. The company is majority owned by Washington state-based Trilogy International, co-founded by wireless pioneer John Stanton. Two Degrees has named Trilogy’s Stewart Sherriff as interim chief executive.

Kathy Picone Hertz, 64, worked for the Auckland University of Technology, helping youth prepare for the workforce.

In a statement, the families of the couple thanked rescue teams for their efforts in the challenging ocean conditions and said they looked forward to one day understanding what happened.

“The recovery of Eric and Kathy, along with the wreckage of the aircraft, is of immense relief to us all,” the families wrote. “Knowing that they can rest together in peace and that we can say our farewells is of huge comfort at this time.”

A private memorial service has been scheduled Thursday in Auckland.

The couple is survived by daughter Ari Hertz.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Georgia man, 69, charged with murder after driveway shooting

A Georgia man is facing murder charges after he allegedly shot and killed a man who mistakenly pulled into his driveway.

Phillip Walker Sailors, of Lilburn, is being held on a malice murder charge after the Saturday night shooting in the northeastern suburb of Atlanta, according to Gwinnett County Jail records.

Rodrigo Abad Diaz, of Duluth, was shot in the head as he tried to drive away from Sailors’ home, an arrest warrant indicates.

Sailors’ attorney, Mike Puglise, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the Vietnam veteran was home with his wife late at night and assumed Diaz arrived for a home invasion. Sailors was defending his home and maintains his innocence, Puglise said.

Diaz’s girlfriend, meanwhile, painted a more sinister image of Sailors, claiming he shot Diaz without asking questions and then pointed the gun at her. The couple, who were accompanied by two other friends, had planned to go ice skating, the newspaper reports.

“I want him to spend all his life in prison,” Angie Rebolledo, 17, told the newspaper. “He is a crazy man.”

As Rebolledo tended to Diaz, she said Sailors showed no remorse and offered no assistance.

Friends and relatives countered that portrayal of Sailors by citing the retired Bell South employee’s “unblemished” reputation in the community for more than 40 years, according to Chris Anderson, pastor of Killian Hill Baptist Church in Lilburn.

Puglise said a neighbor of Sailors’ had recently been robbed, making the elderly man wary when he spotted two people in his driveway. He then grabbed his gun as he headed outside and fired a warning shot into the air. Puglise said Sailors fired at Diaz only after the young man accelerated his car toward him.

“He thought he was going to get run down,” he said.

The police report, however, indicates that Diaz’s vehicle was leaving Sailors’ property when Diaz was shot. Police said the Colombia native’s red Mitsubishi was found at the end of the driveway, with Diaz slumped over the steering wheel and blood covering his face.

Puglise dismissed suggestions that Diaz’s race may have been a factor in the incident.

“[This was] not a question of color, not a question of race, this is a question of a tragic event dictated by fear,” Puglise told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News