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Mother, daughter from Virginia on flight that crashed in French Alps Mother, daughter from Virginia on flight that crashed in French Alps
(about 3 hours later)
A Virginia man has confirmed his wife and daughter were two of the three Americans aboard an Airbus jet that crashed in the French Alps on Tuesday. A mother and daughter from Prince William County were among three Americans who perished when an Airbus jet plunged into a frozen ridge in the French Alps this week, officials said Wednesday.
Raymond Selke, of Nokesville, Va., said his wife, Yvonne Selke, and daughter, Emily Selke, were among the 150 people who died on a Germanwings flight from Spain to Germany. Selke said he was too distraught to give details about his family members or discuss the crash. Yvonne Selke, a longtime government contractor, and Emily Selke, a recent graduate of Drexel University, died Tuesday along with 148 others on the Germanwings flight from Spain to Germany.
Raymond Selke said he was too distraught to discuss the lives of his wife and daughter or why they were aboard the flight, but the family released a brief statement asking for time to heal.
“Our entire family is deeply saddened by the losses of Yvonne and Emily Selke,” the statement read. “Two wonderful, caring, amazing people who meant so much to so many. At this difficult time we respectfully ask for privacy and your prayers.”
The mystery of why the plane plunged from its flight path endured Wednesday, even as top leaders from Europe monitored the investigation of the crash and recovery efforts continued near the southern French town of Seynes-les-Alpes.
[Officials: Flight recorder recovered but damaged][Officials: Flight recorder recovered but damaged]
But the family released a statement Wednesday afternoon remembering their loved ones and asking for privacy. France’s president was joined by the leaders of Germany and Spain in an Alpine pasture now used as a base for experts seeking to unravel what led to the crash. The three, walking side by side, were briefed on the grim recovery efforts in the snowbound French mountains.
“Our entire family is deeply saddened by the losses of Yvonne and Emily Selke,” it read. “Two wonderful, caring, amazing people who meant so much to so many. At this difficult time we respectfully ask for privacy and your prayers.” Earlier in the day, one of the flight recorders or black boxes was recovered in a damaged state amid the wide debris field. The Associated Press reported that French investigators cracked open the black box and retrieved some audio from its cockpit voice recorder by Wednesday afternoon, hoping to gain their first insights into the possible causes of the crash.
Yvonne Selke was an employee of Booz Allen Hamilton in Washington for nearly 23 years, according to a statement from the company. Selke worked as a government contractor with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Remi Jouty, director of the French aviation investigative agency, said the audio included sounds and voices. He said it was too early to draw any conclusions from the recorder.
French President François Hollande, meanwhile, said the case for the second black box, the flight data recorder, had been found but not its contents, according to the AP.
In the D.C. area, family, friends and co-workers of the Selkes reacted with shock and grief to their deaths. Yvonne Selke was an employee of Booz Allen Hamilton for nearly 23 years, according to the company. She was working on a contract with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.
“Yvonne was a wonderful co-worker and a dedicated employee,” Betty Thompson, a vice president, wrote in a statement. “We are in contact with her family to provide comfort and support, and are providing support options to her co-workers, as well.”“Yvonne was a wonderful co-worker and a dedicated employee,” Betty Thompson, a vice president, wrote in a statement. “We are in contact with her family to provide comfort and support, and are providing support options to her co-workers, as well.”
The Drexel University Gamma Sigma Sigma chapter posted a message on the sorority’s Facebook page mourning Emily Selke’s death. Selke served as vice president of the school’s Zeta chapter of the sorority. One former classmate said Yvonne Selke had kept in touch with some friends from the Class of 1975 at Springfield High School and had planned to attend their upcoming 40th reunion.
“She embodied the spirit of Gamma Sigma Sigma,” the sorority said. “As a person and friend, Emily always put others before herself and cared deeply for all those in her life. Emily will be greatly missed by her fellow sisters of Zeta. Please keep Emily, her mother and their family in your thoughts and prayers during this heartbreaking time.” Emily Selke was an honors graduate from Drexel University in Philadelphia in 2013, according to the school. She majored in music industry in the school’s Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts and Design.
Ranita Lopez, national president of Gamma Sigma Sigma, said that Selke joined the service sorority at Drexel in 2011. An online résumé listed her as a community manager for an Alexandria firm that offers working space for professionals and a Girl Scout. The Drexel University Gamma Sigma Sigma chapter posted a message on Facebook saying Selke served as vice president of the service sorority.
“Emily was integral in the rebuilding of the Zeta chapter,” Lopez said. “Her work and dedication as membership vice president helped to grow Zeta into the thriving chapter that it has now become. She is remembered for her giving, service-oriented spirit.” Drexel professor Xela Batchelder said that Selke became involved in an effort to start a local theater and music festival in Pittsburgh. Selke was interested in a career in the music industry, Batchelder said, and took classes on festival and entertainment management.
Officials at Drexel said Selke was a 2013 honors graduate who majored in music industry in the school’s Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts and Design. “What I really liked about her is that she knew what she wanted to do,” Batchelder said. “She took all these extra opportunities that weren’t required to learn more about festival management. She was a good self-starter.”
“Drexel is deeply saddened to hear about the tragic loss of alumna Emily Selke and her mother,” the school said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers are with her family and friends.” Batchelder said that Selke went on a study abroad trip to Edinburgh to take part in the city’s popular fringe festival. Batchelder said Yvonne Selke joined her daughter for the Scotland trip, and the pair adored each other.
Emily Selke’s LinkedIn profile said she was a community manager at Alexandria’s Carr Workplaces, had previously worked as a manager with the Pittsburgh Fringe Festival and was a lifetime Girl Scout. Taylor Miller, 21, said that Emily Selke was well known at Woodbridge Senior High, where she graduated summa cum laude in 2010.
Phil Kavits, a spokesman for Prince William County schools, said Selke was honored in 2010 for graduating summa cum laude from Woodbridge High School, meaning she achieved a grade point average of 4.0 or higher. Miller said Selke was a choir singer with a sweet-sounding voice and a writer whose words flowed off the page. Miller said that her creative-writing classmate stunned other students to silence when Selke read her work aloud.
Alex Tyler, who said she knew Selke at Drexel, sent The Washington Post a statement she composed with others who were friends with the alumna. They called Selke selfless. “Everybody would just melt with what she wrote,” said Miller, of Keyser, W.Va.
“Emily was a truly amazing woman and we were honored to have her in our lives,” the statement said. “She was an incredibly fun person who never shied away from a challenge. Emily grew our hearts with acceptance of everyone and grew our minds with new music and her love of travel. She was a light that shined in our lives and we will always remember her with a smile on her face and a funny story to share. Emily always put others before herself and cared deeply for all those in her life.” Miller said that Selke could be wickedly sarcastic with her humor, then wow friends a moment later with her kindness.
Jennifer Jenkins contributed to this report. “She was the most open-minded, nicest person,” Miller said. “She didn’t care if you were a jock or an introvert. She wanted to get to know you. That’s why everyone gravitated to Emily because she wanted to be around you, and people wanted to be around her.”
Miller said that she once visited the Selke’s Nokesville home and was blown away by the family’s idyllic cul-de-sac.
“She had the perfect life,” Miller said. “She had a nice house, nice clothes. But she was so humble. It didn’t matter who you were. She was always polite and kind.”
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told France’s RTL radio that all theories about what might have caused the crash must be explored but that a terrorist attack was not the most likely scenario.
[The plane’s final moments, minute by minute ]
Bundled against strong winds, Hollande thanked the teams leading the efforts to reach the crash site by helicopter and by foot. He was accompanied by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
Meanwhile, the human toll from the crash came clearer. Those lost included two babies, two opera singers, a pair of Iranian journalists, an Australian mother and her adult son vacationing together, and 16 German 10th-graders and their teachers returning from an exchange trip.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki confirmed the Selkes’ deaths but did not identify the third American victim. Most of the other dead were from Germany and Spain. She said U.S. officials were reviewing records to check whether other Americans were on the flight as the recovery for bodies began.
“We are in contact with family members and we extend our deepest condolences to the families and loved ones of the 150 people on board,” Psaki said in a statement.
Kirchner reported from Haltern, Germany. Daniela Deane in London and Jennifer Jenkins and Victoria St. Martin in Washington contributed to this report.
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