Updated On: 22 August, 2019 10:14 AM IST | | AP
The 34-year-old pilot said he had taken his single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza propeller plane out Tuesday for an aerial photo shoot over Half Moon Bay, south of San Francisco, when it lost power

This picture has been used for representational purpose only
Los Angeles: A pilot who said Wednesday he was forced to ditch his newly purchased aircraft in the ocean off California during a photo shoot believes bad gasoline caused the plane to malfunction. Pilot David Lesh said he had siphoned particulate matter out of the gas but doesn't think he got all of it. "This definitely was more stuff than I was used to seeing," he said. The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating. FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said investigators had not yet spoken to Lesh. The 34-year-old pilot said he had taken his single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza propeller plane out Tuesday for an aerial photo shoot over Half Moon Bay, south of San Francisco, when it lost power.
"I just did everything I could to get the motor going again," he said. "Nothing was working." Lesh said the plane "skipped along the water" for a few hundred feet without much of an impact before he and his passenger, a friend, grabbed anything they could use to float. A man in another plane piloted by Owen Leipelt had been taking photos of his friend's aircraft when it went down. "David radios to me that he's lost engine power," Leipelt said. "When you hear that, you think 'whoa, whoa, whoa, what did I just hear, say that again.'" Leipelt, 20, of San Jose called air traffic control for help and circled over the two people in the water. Meanwhile, Lesh filmed himself and his friend with his water-resistant cellphone as their plane quickly sank. "We got lucky with the conditions," he said. "The seas were very calm, it was daytime."