In a statement Monday that offered insight into authorities' ongoing probe into the ex-White House staffer's death - which is also being investigated by the FBI - the Connecticut State Troopers confirmed the private aircraft belonged to a company headed by Hyde's spouse, Jonathan Chambers.
The company, Kansas-city based Conexon, provides high-speed internet service to rural communities. Prior to joining the company, Chambers was also once a prominent figure in Washington, working in the U.S. Senate as a Republican staff director and later as the Chief of the Office of Strategic Planning for the FCC.
Hyde, meanwhile, worked as a part-time consultant to the DC-based think tank Aspen Institute, a gathering of leaders throughout various industries who strive to solve some of the world's most prevailing issues.
In the role, Hyde served as co-chair of the Aspen Partnership for an Inclusive Economy (APIE), which, according to the agency's website, 'works to bridge the gaps between the people who deserve more inclusive systems and standards and the people who set them.'
Officials said Hyde was immediately transported to Saint Francis Medical Center in Hartford, Connecticut, after the plane landed Friday, where she was pronounced dead that evening.
No one else was injured in the incident, with officials confirming that both Chambers and one of the couple's two children were on board at the time of the emergency landing.
'On 03/03/2023, at approximately 3:49 PM, Connecticut State Troopers responded to a medical assist call at Bradley International Airport. One patient was subsequently transported to an area hospital via ambulance,' a Connecticut State Police spokesperson told DailyMail.com.