
Valbrembo, Italy: A routine flight training exercise ended in tragedy on June 1 when a Cessna 152 operated by flight school Cantor Air crashed near Valbrembo Airport in northern Italy, killing instructor Daniel Taino and leaving a 19-year-old student pilot critically injured.
The two-seat training aircraft came down shortly after 4 p.m. local time in Via Don Bosco, a residential area near the airfield in Valbrembo, west of Bergamo. Witnesses reported seeing the aircraft flying at low altitude before it struck electrical infrastructure and crashed between homes, narrowly avoiding a far more serious disaster on the ground.
Taino, 26, a resident of Pianengo in Italy’s Cremona province, died at the scene. The student pilot, a 19-year-old from Milan, sustained severe injuries and was transported by emergency responders to Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital in Bergamo, where he remained in critical condition.

According to Italian media reports, the aircraft was conducting a local instructional flight involving touch-and-go training maneuvers. The crew had been operating in the vicinity of the River Brembo and the Valbrembo airfield when the aircraft encountered difficulties.
Several eyewitnesses described seeing the aircraft rapidly lose altitude moments before impact. One witness, who was working nearby, rushed to the wreckage after hearing cries for help from the trapped student. Emergency services, firefighters, law enforcement personnel and medical teams responded within minutes.
Investigators are examining whether the aircraft experienced an engine-related problem before the crash. However, authorities have emphasized that the cause remains undetermined pending a full investigation.
The aircraft involved was identified as a Cessna 152, one of the most widely used training aircraft in general aviation. Preliminary reports indicate the aircraft may have been attempting to return toward the airfield when it struck power infrastructure and crashed near residential properties.
Cantor Air, an ENAC-approved flight training organization operating from the Valbrembo area, confirmed its connection to the flight through tributes paid to Taino following the accident. Colleagues and students from the school gathered at the crash site after the tragedy.
Friends and fellow aviators described Taino as a passionate young pilot who had transformed a lifelong ambition into a professional flying career. Reports indicate he had recently begun working as a flight instructor after completing his own pilot training and had been instructing students for approximately five months.
The flight school Cantor Air released a heartfelt statement expressing their profound grief over the passing of their flight instructor, colleague, and friend, Daniel Taino. The school described Taino as an integral part of their family who had evolved from a passionate young student into a highly dedicated and respected professional.
Representatives from Cantor Air extended their deepest and most sincere condolences to Taino’s family and loved ones, while also expressing their thoughts, support, and hope for the student pilot involved in the accident and his family. Reflecting on the immense loss, the school stated that Taino’s enduring legacy, passion for aviation, and rare kindness would continue to live on through the many students he mentored and the colleagues who shared his journey.
Italian aviation safety investigators from ANSV, together with local prosecutors and technical specialists, have secured the crash site and launched a formal investigation. Authorities are expected to examine the aircraft’s maintenance history, flight path, witness accounts and any available operational data before determining the cause of the accident.



















