Tag Archives: Los Roques

Has Vittorio Missoni's Missing Plane Been Found?

By Justin Fenner

Investigators are working to determine if wreckage found on the island of Curaçao came from Vittorio Missoni‘s missing plane.

The Curaçao Chronicle confirmed that pieces of a small aircraft were found on Thursday afternoon. By Friday morning, the Italian news wire Ansa reported that the wreckage is being tested to see if it matches the Cessna 402 that was flying Missoni, his wife, and another couple from a resort in Los Roques when it disappeared on Jan. 4. The search effort has been ongoing for seven weeks, but the only elements from the plane that have been found are two pieces of luggage that washed ashore on Curaçao and nearby Bonaire Island.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Police report 2 bags from missing designer Missoni's plane have been found

Police on the tiny island of Bonaire said Thursday that two pieces of luggage from a missing plane that was carrying the CEO of Italian fashion house Missoni has washed up on a local beach.

In Curacao, Bonaire police spokesman Hans Baltus confirmed that two bags found earlier this week on a rocky beach were from the missing plane carrying Vittorio Missoni, his wife and four others. Baltus declined to provide information about the nametags on the battered bags, citing an ongoing investigation.

However, Missoni family friend Claudio Verna in Italy said that authorities in Bonaire phoned him Tuesday to tell him that two bags were found that belonged to the missing CEO. He said the bags were discovered Tuesday by a local newspaper reporter on the tiny island off Venezuela.

Baltus said police were in contact with Verna as a family representative.

The BN-2 Islander plane carrying Missoni and the others vanished shortly after takeoff on Jan. 4 from Los Roques, a tiny archipelago that is a dependency of Venezuela. It was destined for Caracas, the South American nation’s capital.

Late last month, a bag belonging to a tourist who missed that flight washed up in nearby Curacao, which lies some 200 miles (320 kilometers) west of the resort islands of Los Roques. It was the first sign of debris from the missing plane.

From Italy, Verna said the Missoni family and friends of the missing couple are still hoping that the plane did not plunge into the ocean.

“You cannot exclude that someone could launch bags in the sea. We are not in the condition now to exclude any other option,” he said.

Verna said he will fly to Venezuela next week and try to advance plans to hire a boat to search for the missing plane.

Baltus said the two bags found in Bonaire are expected to be sent shortly to authorities in Venezuela.

Italy‘s air safety agency has said the pilot of the vanished plane had an expired medical fitness certificate and that the company operating the aircraft wasn’t yet authorized to fly. However, the National Flight Safety Agency has said that neither factor is being blamed for the disappearance at this time.

Seven minutes after takeoff, the pilot reported that he was at 5,000 feet and 10 nautical miles from the Los Roques airport, according to the agency. The last radar readings showed the aircraft accelerating at 5,400 feet before it quickly lost altitude and speed, veering to the right until it disappeared from the radar.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Police: 2 bags from Missoni plane found in Bonaire

Police say more luggage from a missing plane that was carrying the CEO of Italian fashion house Missoni has washed up on a Caribbean beach.

Family friend Claudio Verna says authorities in Bonaire told him that the bags belonged to missing Vittorio Missoni and his wife. Verna says the bags were found Tuesday on the tiny island off Venezuela.

On Thursday, Bonaire police spokesman Hans Baltus confirmed that the two bags were from the missing plane carrying Missoni. But he declined to provide information about the bags’ nametags.

The plane carrying Missoni vanished shortly after takeoff on Jan. 4 from Los Roques, a tiny archipelago that is a dependency of Venezuela.

Late last month, a bag belonging to a German tourist who missed that flight washed up in nearby Curacao.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Vittorio Missoni's Bag Found on Caribbean Island

By Justin Fenner

A bag belonging to Vittorio Missoni has been found on the Caribbean island of Bonaire, not far from where the executive’s plane went missing over a month ago.

A Missoni spokeswoman told WWD that the bag had Vittorio’s name on its label, but didn’t say whether it would have an effect on the search effort. Two weeks ago, another bag that had been on Missoni’s plane was found on the island of Curacao.

On Jan. 4, Missoni, his wife, and another couple were coming back from their vacation in Los Roques, an island chain off the coast of Venezuela, when their private plane went missing. The Missoni family has vowed to keep searching for the missing passengers until they are found.

Related: Three Weeks Later, the Search For Missing Missoni Still Not Over

Related: Vittorio Missoni’s Son Calls Plane Crash “Least Plausible Reason” For Father’s Disappearance

Related: Was Vittorio Missoni Kidnapped?

Related: Search For Vittorio Missoni Continues After Plane Disappears in Venezuela

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Debris of missing Missoni plane found in Curacao

The first sign of debris from a missing plane that was carrying the CEO of Italian fashion house Missoni has surfaced in the Dutch Caribbean island of Curacao, an official said Tuesday.

A German tourist found a bag belonging to an Italian who missed the flight that Vittorio Missoni was on when the plane vanished shortly after takeoff on Jan. 4 near Venezuela, said Norman Serphos, a spokesman for Curacao’s prosecutor’s office.

Curacao lies about 200 miles (320 kilometers) west of the resort islands of Los Roques, where the plane departed for Caracas, the capital of Venezuela.

Serphos said the German tourist had contacted the owner of the bag in Italy, who in turn called police in Curacao.

Local police received the bag on Friday and are working with authorities in Venezuela and Italy, Serphos said.

The bag was found along Curacao’s rocky north coast, a place sometimes frequented by tourists, Serphos said.

An official at the Italian Embassy in Caracas confirmed that a bag had been found in Curacao. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to comment publicly on the matter. He said the embassy planned to make a statement later.

The BN-2 Islander plane was carrying Missoni, three other Italian tourists and two crew members when it vanished.

Italy‘s air safety agency has said the pilot had an expired medical fitness certificate and that the company operating the aircraft wasn’t yet authorized to fly. However, the National Flight Safety Agency said that neither factor yet is being blamed for the disappearance.

Seven minutes after takeoff, the pilot reported that he was at 5,000 feet and 10 nautical miles from the Los Roques airport, according to the agency. The last radar readings showed the aircraft accelerating at 5,400 feet before it quickly lost altitude and speed, veering to the right until it disappeared from the radar.

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Associated Press writer Ian James in Caracas contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Debris of plane carrying missing CEO of Italian fashion house Missoni found in Curacao

The first sign of debris from a missing plane that was carrying the CEO of Italian fashion house Missoni has surfaced in the Dutch Caribbean island of Curacao.

A spokesman for the island’s prosecutor’s office says a tourist found a bag belonging to an Italian who missed the flight. The plane was carrying Vittorio Missoni when it vanished Jan. 4 after takeoff from the Venezuelan resort islands of Los Roques. Norman Serphos said Tuesday that the German tourist had contacted the owner of the bag in Italy, who in turn called police in Curacao.

Serphos said Curacao police received the bag on Friday and are working with authorities in Venezuela and Italy.

Curacao lies about 200 miles west of Los Roques.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Three Weeks Later, the Search For Missing Missoni Still Not Over

By Justin Fenner

It’s been nearly three weeks since a plane carrying Vittorio Missoni disappeared off the coast of Venezuela, and his family is committed to keeping the search effort going.

Vittorio’s brother Luca Missoni told WWD that investigators haven’t ruled out any of the theories about Vittorio’s disappearance. “For this reason, I can confirm that in Caracas not only is the search at sea and on the coast not over, but that investigations continue, without neglecting any possibility,” he said.

Luca had been in Venezuela helping with the search effort over the last few weeks, but he said that a family friend is now following the search party in his place. Luca will travel from Italy back to Venezuela in February, when a ship used for “deep sea submarine research” will join the effort.

Vittorio Missoni was flying from the Venezuelan resort archipelago of Los Roques to Caracas with his wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, their friends Guido Foresti and Elda Scalvenzi, and two crew members on Jan. 4 when their plane disappeared. So far no sign of the plane or its passengers has been found.

Related: Vittorio Missoni’s Son Calls Plane Crash “Least Plausible Reason” For Father’s Disappearance

Related: Was Vittorio Missoni Kidnapped?

Related: Search For Vittorio Missoni Continues After Plane Disappears in Venezuela

Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Expired license for missing Missoni CEO's pilot

Italy’s national air safety agency says the owner of the plane that disappeared Jan. 4 over Venezuela with the CEO of fashion house Missoni on board didn’t have a certificate to operate.

The agency also said in a statement Tuesday that the pilot’s license had expired in November.

The National Air Safety Agency stressed that at the moment, neither factor “represents a direct, correlating cause” of the disappearance, but are merely facts gathered in the investigation.

The BN-2 Islander dropped off radar screens about 11 miles (18 kilometers) south of the resort islands of Los Roques during a flight to Caracas.

It was carrying two crew members and four Italian tourists, including Vittorio Missoni, CEO of his family’s fashion company.

Italy sent four experts to help with the search.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Italians join Venezuela's search for missing plane

Italy has sent experts to help Venezuelan authorities search for a plane that disappeared carrying the CEO of Italian fashion firm Missoni.

More than 400 people in boats, planes and helicopters were searching for the twin-engine aircraft, which disappeared off the resort islands of Los Roques.

The BN-2 Islander disappeared on Jan 4. It dropped off radar about 11 miles (18 kilometers) south of Los Roques during a flight to Caracas.

It was carrying two crew members and four Italian tourists, including Vittorio Missoni, CEO of his family’s fashion company.

Venezuela‘s government announced on Thursday that four Italian experts have joined the search.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Vittorio Missoni's Son Calls Plane Crash "Least Plausible Reason" For Father's Disappearance

By Justin Fenner

The Missoni family is holding fast to the hope that Vittorio Missoni‘s missing plane was hijacked, and Vittorio’s eldest son has called a crash implausible.

“My father will come back; we are waiting for him,” said Vittorio’s 28-year-old son Ottavio Missoni Jr. in an interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. “I am not speaking with my head but with my heart. A plane cannot vanish in this way, on a short route, without leaving any trace . . . I remain convinced that the least plausible reason is that they crashed into the water. My uncle Luca, in Venezuela, has also confirmed that these planes are capable of sea landings in case of emergency.”

Luca Missoni, Vittorio’s brother and a trained pilot, is in Venezuela working with the search party that’s been trying to find Vittorio, his wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, their friend Guido Foresti, and Foresti’s wife, Elda Scalvenzi. They were on a small twin-engine plane traveling from Los Roques to Caracas on Saturday morning, but the plane disappeared shortly after taking off. Angela Missoni, Vittorio’s sister and the brand’s creative director, said earlier this week that she hopes the traveling party was kidnapped. “It’s better to be kidnapped than at the bottom of the sea,” she said.

In the meantime, it’s said the Missoni brand will carry on with business as usual. An unnamed source <a target=_blank href="
http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/mystery_of_the_missoni_plane_ZNUx0xRpLDozBFMNt5592O” target=”_blank”>told Page Six that the house plans to show its men’s collection in Milan next week. However, there’s no official plan to replace Vittorio if he and the others aren’t found.

“There is no succession plan in place,” the source said. “Nobody expected this to happen.”

From left, Marco Missoni, his father, Vittorio Missoni, and brothers Marco Missoni and Ottavio Missoni Jr.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Italy diplomat: still hope in lost plane search

Italy‘s ambassador in Venezuela said there are still hopes of finding a plane that disappeared carrying the CEO of Italian fashion firm Missoni, but the chances of finding survivors decrease with each passing day.

Venezuelan officials said on Wednesday that more than 400 people in boats, planes and helicopters were searching for a sixth day for the plane, which disappeared on Friday off the resort islands of Los Roques.

“We have to maintain hope up to the last moment,” Italian Ambassador Paolo Serpi told The Associated Press in an interview on Tuesday. “We are working for this until the search is called off. Obviously, with each day that goes by, the hope diminishes.”

The islands off Venezuela‘s coast are popular for pristine beaches and scuba diving along coral reefs. The 58-year-old Missoni had been vacationing in Los Roques along with his companion, Maurizia Castiglioni, and two Italian friends. The plane disappeared during a flight of about 95 miles (150 kilometers) from the islands to the Caracas airport.

Venezuelan authorities have said the twin-engine BN-2 Islander dropped off radar about 11 miles (18 kilometers) south of Los Roques.

Dan Cutrer, an aviation safety expert who used to be a search and rescue pilot for the U.S. Coast Guard, said that planes can drop off radar at various altitudes, and still continue to move for a time before going down. Cutrer said that searchers have to take into account that any wreckage would drift in the currents, and the area expands by the day.

“What the authorities are most likely doing at this point is they are using sophisticated computer programs, local knowledge of weather and they are plotting out search areas calculating where the drift would have taken an object the size of the aircraft or a person in a life raft or a person floating in the water,” said Cutrer, an associate professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida.

“The problem with maritime searches like that is every day that goes by, that search area grows exponentially because the winds and waves are still moving,” Cutrer said.

He said that while such a small plane wouldn’t have a cockpit data recorder as larger planes do, many such small planes carry an emergency locator transmitter that the pilot can turn on to send out a distress signal. But, he added, “they are subject to fail.”

Serpi, who visited Los Roques and talked with officials leading the search, said weather conditions including choppy seas have added to difficulties for the searchers.

“It’s a difficult situation, a very complicated natural environment,” Serpi said, speaking at the Italian Embassy in Caracas.

Serpi acknowledged that it’s possible the wreckage or bodies may never be found, pointing to the similar disappearance of a plane off Los Roques exactly four years earlier, on Jan. 4, 2008.

That plane, on a flight from Caracas to Los Roques, disappeared after crashing with 14 people aboard, including eight Italians, a Swiss man and five Venezuelans. The pilot had radioed to controllers that he was having engine trouble before the plane went down as it approached the islands. The body of the Venezuelan co-pilot later washed ashore, but no wreckage was recovered.

“These are very small planes, which have crashed into the water, an impact where they are completely lost to sight, completely destroyed,” Serpi said.

“And it’s very difficult, even from the vantage point of an overflight from 200 or 300 meters to survey the surface, a wide area and maintain a focused search,” he said. “It’s very difficult to recognize pieces.”

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Ian James on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ianjamesap

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Italian experts to help Venezuela in plane search

Italy is sending a specialized team to Venezuela to help search for a small plane that disappeared there last week while carrying the CEO of the Italian fashion firm Missoni.

Among the four Italian tourists on the flight that never made it from the island resort of Los Roques to Caracas on Jan. 4 is Vittorio Missoni, CEO of his family’s fashion company.

Italian Foreign Ministry officials said the Civil Protection team will leave Wednesday to lend assistance. They also quoted Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi as praising Venezuela‘s “massive effort” in the search operations.

The Italian team includes a naval expert, two fire department search-and-rescue experts and a member of Italy‘s national flight safety agency.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Was Vittorio Missoni Kidnapped?

By Justin Fenner

A text message received by the son of Guido Foresti, one of the men on board Vittorio Missoni‘s missing plane, has led investigators to believe that their disappearance may actually have been a hijacking. On Sunday evening, Foresti’s son received a message saying, “Call now, we are reachable,” but no one has been able to reach Foresti’s phone. Investigators are now looking for signs that the four were taken hostage.

This has renewed the Missoni family’s hope that Vittorio and his traveling companions are indeed alive. “It’s better to be kidnapped than at the bottom of the sea,” said Vittorio’s sister Angela on Monday. “We hope all four are alive and well. We also hope that the searches go in all directions.”

Vittorio had been vacationing with his wife Maurizia Castiglioni and two other couples in the Venezuelan islands of Los Roques. Vittorio, Castiglioni, Foresti and Foresti’s wife Elda Scalvenzi were on board the plane with two Venezuelan crew members. The other two people on vacation, Scalvenzi’s brother Giuseppe and his wife Rosa Apostoli, were believed by some to have been kidnapped, but the Italian newspaper Il Messaggero reported that they made it to Milan safely on Sunday.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Venezuela searches for lost plane with Missoni CEO

Search teams fanned out for a fourth day in planes, helicopters and boats off Venezuela on Monday, looking for a missing plane carrying Italian fashion executive Vittorio Missoni and five other people.

Italian Ambassador Paolo Serpi flew over the area on one of the planes on Monday, Interior Ministry press director Jorge Galindo said.

Venezuela‘s government said in a statement on Sunday that a plane and two helicopters were searching along with four civilian planes. Two Coast Guard ships and five patrol boats were also participating. The government said that nearly 400 people were involved in the search, including about 30 divers.

In Italy, Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi said his government is following the search with “great apprehension” and that it is in continuous contact with Venezuelan authorities. He said the government is considering sending search experts from the Italian fire corps.

The 58-year-old Missoni is CEO of Italy’s Missoni fashion house and the eldest son of the company’s founder, Ottavio, now 91.

Vittorio Missoni‘s younger brother, Luca, is a pilot, and was aboard one of the planes involved in the search, the Italian news agency ANSA reported, quoting sibling Angela Missoni.

Authorities have said the twin-engine BN-2 Islander had enough fuel on board for a three-hour flight when it took off on Friday morning from Venezuela‘s Los Roques islands, where the group had been vacationing.

The flight was supposed to take 42 minutes, but the civil aviation agency said the authorities declared an alert after the plane didn’t make contact with the control tower at the Caracas airport.

“The last position registered in radar data and those supplied by a system on board the aircraft” was about 11 miles (18 kilometers) south of Los Roques, the National Civil Aviation Institute said in a statement over the weekend.

The government said in its statement on Sunday that planes and helicopters were searching a swath of about 1,700 square miles (4,400 square kilometers) off the archipelago.

The islands are popular for scuba diving, white beaches and coral reefs. Missoni had been vacationing in the islands along with his wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, and two Italian friends.

Another couple also had vacationed along with Missoni and the others who were aboard the vanished plane, but took a separate flight to Caracas. One of them, Giuseppe Scalvenzi, told ANSA that he saw lightning during a storm at the time the other plane would have been flying.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Vittorio Missoni Missing After Plane Disappears in Venezuela

By Justin Fenner

Authorities in Venezuela are on a search-and-rescue mission after a plane carrying Vittorio Missoni disappeared on Friday.

The Italian newspaper La Repubblica reports that Missoni, his wife Maurizia Castiglioni, another couple and two Venezuelan crew members were leaving the island resort of Los Roques when their plane went missing. Emergency services weren’t able to find the plane yesterday and halted the search overnight.

Giovanni Davoli, the Italian consul in Venezuela, told Reuters the search effort resumed Saturday morning. “They have been looking for it with helicopters and ships, but have not found anything yet,” he said.

A Missoni spokeswoman said the family “has been informed by the Venezuelan consulate that Vittorio Missoni and his wife are missing, but we don’t know any more.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

Missoni scion on small plane missing in Venezuela

Italian state radio says a son of the Missoni fashion family is among six passengers on a small plane that has gone missing over islands off the Venezuelan coast.

Venezuela‘s Interior Minister Nestor Reverol said the plane was declared missing hours after taking off Friday from Los Roques, a string of islands, cays and islets that is popular for scuba diving, white beaches and coral reefs. He said the plane was expected at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Caracas but didn’t arrive and that the four Italian tourists aboard had spent their Christmas and New Year at the resort. The plane had two Venezuelan crew members.

The Italian radio report Saturday says among those on board are Vittorio Missoni and his wife, and two of their friends from northern Italy.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Plane with 4 Italian tourists missing in Venezuela

Venezuela‘s Interior Minister says rescuers are looking for a small plane with six people on board, including four Italian tourists, which disappeared near the tourist archipelago of Los Roques.

Nestor Reverol said the SAR DA-42 Mpp was declared missing hours after taking off Friday from Los Roques, a string of islands, cays and islets that is popular for scuba diving, white beaches and coral reefs.

Reverol said the plane was expected at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Caracas but didn’t arrive and that the four Italian tourists aboard had spent their Christmas and New Year at the resort. The plane had two Venezuelan crew members.

He said that two navy planes were conducting the search. He didn’t provide the names of the Italian tourists.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Erin Fetherston Pre-Fall 2013

By Justin Fenner

For Erin Fetherston, Pre-Fall dressing means making the most of the balmy days at the end of Summer. In her latest offering, a recent trip to Los Roques – a group of islands off the coast of Venezuela – informed the tropical color palette and the use of pattern. For example, one multicolored print depicting a stylized ecosystem of people, trees, homes, and butterflies got cut into a sleeveless shirt and a dress.

Of course, shoppers can always expect fun dresses from Fetherston, and this offering doesn’t disappoint on that front. A sparkly, strapless pink-and-gold pleated number was eye-catching and fun, but some of the other evening pieces (one combined a black bodice with a gold-spangled skirt covered by a layer of organza) were a little more grown-up. The few separates, like a pair of slim trousers and a sleeveless black peplum top, preserved that sense of polish.

Photo: Thomas Kletecka courtesy of Erin Fetherston.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie