Gym magnate Rainer Schaller and son confirmed dead after plane crash off Costa Rica

His company RSG Group shared the tragic news in a statement on Friday
FILES-GERMANY-COSTA RICA-AIR-ACCIDENT
AFP via Getty Images
Lydia Chantler-Hicks4 November 2022

The founder and CEO of a major international gym conglomerate, Rainer Schaller, has been confirmed dead after a plane crash off Costa Rica late last month.

The plane, a nine-seat Italian-made Piaggio P180 Avanti, disappeared from radar just off the country's Caribbean coast on October 21.

RSG Group, whose outlets include Gold's Gym and McFit, confirmed shortly afterwards that Mr Schaller, family and friends had been on board.

In a statement released on Friday the firm confirmed Mr Schaller and his son have tragically been found dead.

"Today, it is with great dismay that we share the news that Rainer Schaller and his son have been identified as the deceased from the plane crash off the coast of Costa Rica,” it said.

Costa Rican authorities continue a search for wreckage of the plane carrying German entrepreneur Rainer Schaller
via REUTERS

"His life partner, her daughter, our colleague and the pilot, who were also on board, are still among the missing.”

The aircraft disappeared from radar as it was heading to Limon, a resort town on the coast.

Costa Rica's security ministry said the flight had set out from Mexico.

All five passengers were German citizens, while the plane's pilot was Swiss.

Mr Schaller was born in 1969 in the southern German city of Bamberg and set up his first gym in Wuerzburg in 1997.

The RSG Group is a conglomerate of 21 fitness, lifestyle and fashion brands that operates in 48 countries and has 41,000 employees, either directly or through franchises.

In 2010, he was in the news as an organiser of the Love Parade techno festival. A mass panic at the event in the German city of Duisburg killed 21 people and injured more than 500. Mr Schaller did not face investigation over the disaster, and a trial of people who were accused of planning and security failures was closed without a verdict in 2020.

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