Federal investigators haven’t been able to determine why prominent personal injury attorney Steve Barnes lost control of his plane and crashed in 2020, killing him and his niece.
Barnes, a registered pilot, died along with his niece, Elizabeth Barnes in the crash near Corfu, about 15 miles east of Buffalo. Steve Barnes was half of Cellino & Barnes, a firm known for its catchy TV jingle.
In a report Friday, the National Transportation Safety Board concluded Barnes lost contact with air traffic controllers for about 25 minutes on the flight from New Hampshire to Buffalo, then reestablished contact about 30 miles from Buffalo and said “everything’s fine.”
Shortly afterward, the single-engine Socata TBM-700 began to descend at high speed, entered a spiral dive and crashed in some woods.
The fact that Barnes was still at a cruising altitude of 28,000 feet that close to his destination “suggests a clear breakdown in awareness of his position through distraction or impairment,” the NTSB found. But the report concluded Barnes’ communication with controllers was clear and didn’t suggest any impairment at that moment.
The NTSB attributed the probable cause of the accident to the pilot’s “failure to maintain control of the airplane for undetermined reasons during the descent to the destination airport.”
Neighbors described the plane making a loud, whining noise, then dropping into a wooded area, Genesee County Sheriff William Sheron had said.
Cellino & Barnes began as small firm in Buffalo but became well known in New York City and beyond for its ubiquitous advertising on billboards and on television.
Its old-time jingle, in which the law firm’s phone number was put to song, has been the subject of a sketch on Saturday Night Live, and other late-night TV host jokes for years. Broadway actors in 2018 posted viral videos of themselves singing the jingle in what was dubbed the “Cellino & Barnes Challenge.”
The law firm’s principal lawyers, Barnes and his partner Ross Cellino, appeared together in the advertisements, but had a falling out in recent years and battled each other in court.
Cellino said that Barnes is survived by his three children, and his longtime partner Ellen Sturm, who is also an attorney at the firm.
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