SECTION: Part A; Page 1; Column 6; Late Final Desk
LENGTH: 514 words
HEADLINE: 2ND CONGRESSMAN IN WEEK KILLED IN AIRPLANE CRASH;
MISS. REP. DIES IN HIS HOME STATE
BYLINE: From Times Wire Services
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
BODY:
Mississippi congressman Larkin Smith died in the blazing crash of his light
plane in a densely forested area, the second member of the House killed in an
air accident in a week, authorities said today.
Smith, a 45-year-old Republican, threw out the first ball of the Dixie Youth
World Series baseball tournament Sunday evening in Hattiesburg, Miss., then
left in good weather on a 35-minute flight to Gulfport.
Fifteen minutes later, witnesses heard the plane descend, its single engine
still running, WLOX-TV in Biloxi reported.
The plane disintegrated and burned on landing, cutting a 300-yard swath through
the thick underbrush of the wilderness area of the DeSoto National Forest, the
radio station reported.
Hundreds of searchers hunted through the night for the plane, but it was only
after daylight that it was spotted from the air.
"It is my sad duty to announce the death of Congressman Larkin Smith of
Mississippi's 5th District," said a shaken aide, John Walker, at a Washington
news conference.
Smith's death was confirmed only a day after the discovery of the wreckage of
a plane carrying Rep. Mickey Leland (D-Tex.) and 15 other people. They were
killed when their plane crashed in heavily forested mountainous terrain last
week in Ethiopia.
House Speaker Thomas Foley called the deaths of Leland and Smith "a heavy
blow" to the House.
Speaking with reporters as he arrived at the Capitol, Foley said that sometimes
there are "great periods of tragedy coming one after the other."
But he said it was "unprecedented outside of wartime, in my experience,
to lose two such promising members by accidental death in the same week."
President Bush telephoned condolences to Smith's wife, and White House spokesman
Marlin Fitzwater said Bush felt deep regret.
"Congressman Smith was just beginning a promising career in the Congress.
The President and Mrs. Bush extend their sympathies to the family of Congressman
Smith and his associate, who also died in the crash," the spokesman said.
That was a reference to the pilot, Chuck Vierling, who also died in the crash.
Mississippi Gov. Ray Mabus ordered state flags to be flown at half-staff, saying
Smith "had dedicated his life to public service." Smith's seat will
be filled by special election.
In his seven months in Congress, Smith had co-sponsored legislation to strengthen
federal drug law enforcement and criticized federal drug czar William Bennett
for backing a ban on semiautomatic assault weapons from other countries.
Smith represented the Gulfport area in his first term as a congressman.
Before he was elected, Smith had spent his career in law enforcement, serving
as Gulfport chief of police and later as sheriff of Harrison County. He is survived
by a wife and daughter.
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) used the occasion to take to task those who have
been critical of travel by members of Congress. He said the kind of travel done
by Smith and Leland is often the object of criticism.
"These two members lost their lives while they were trying to provide good
representation," he said.
GRAPHIC: Photo, U.S. Rep. Larkin Smith, who was killed in a plane crash. Associated
Press
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