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Tag: Plane Crash

  • NTSB updates Colonie plane crash

    NTSB updates Colonie plane crash

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    COLONIE, N.Y. (NEWS10) — We have new information about the plane that crashed Monday morning near the William K. Sanford town library in Colonie. NEWS10 reporter James De La Fuente attended a press conference on Tuesday June 18 when the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and local officials gave a brief update into the crash.

    “Before we begin, I would like to express my most sincere condolences to the family and friends of our deceased pilot,” started Lynn Spencer, Air Safety Investigator with the NTSB.

    Spencer says they are not identifying the sole occupant and victim at this time other than to say that she is a Canadian woman.  Spencer says the twin engine personal aircraft was headed to Canada and had made it about a mile and a half from the airport before she says the plane seemed to struggle to gain altitude. “We will be looking at pilot qualifications, the training, the airframe itself and environmental factors,” stated Spencer.

    Spencer also said that because the plane was destroyed by a post-crash explosion her team will be relying on the community for some help in identifying what may have gone tragically wrong. “Of note was that the airplane seemed to have difficulty gaining altitude and then went nearly straight up to about 800 feet and did a loop and then turned left, did at least one roll, and then another left hand turn to the final impact.” She went on to explain how control could have been lost. “When a pilot is struggling to maintain control of the airplane, you often see what looks like acrobatic flying. And it’s simply the pilot’s attempt to deal with everything from an engine failure to a control failure to an environmental event. Anything that upsets the normal flight trajectory.”

    Spencer says she has received a number of reports from the community and eyewitness accounts. “This kind of flight path is typical of an extreme loss of control situation in the cockpit and a pilot attempting to regain control of the airplane. The aircraft struggle was noted by the air traffic controller who canceled the takeoff clearance for the following aircraft because he could see that the departing aircraft was having difficulty.”

    She says the rest of the plane will be packed up and shipped for further investigation. “And later tonight [Tuesday] [the airplane] will be going to Massachusetts to a secure facility there where we will start a full layout, and examination of the airframe and the engines.” Preliminary reports will be completed in the next few weeks and a final report in 18-24 months.

    Maxwell Road between Albany Shaker Road and Old Niskayuna Road have now been reopened to the public.

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    James De La Fuente

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  • Small plane crashes in San Bernardino

    Small plane crashes in San Bernardino

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    A small plane crashed in the San Bernardino area Saturday night and authorities were investigating, police said.

    It wasn’t immediately known if anyone survived the crash, which was located in a “significant debris field” in the area north of Palm Avenue and Verdemont Drive, east of the 215 Freeway and Kendall Drive,  San Bernardino Police Sgt. Christopher Gray said.

    Initial calls about the crash came in just after 8 p.m. and the aircraft appeared to be a small twin-engine plane.

    The search for survivors was hampered by the rainy weather and difficult terrain. Gray said police, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department and the San Bernardino County Fire Department were investigating and the crash may have happened in the county’s jurisdiction. The crash site is about a dozen miles northwest of San Bernardino International Airport.

    It wasn’t immediately known how many people were aboard the plane, where it was flying from and to and what model the plane is. A request for comment was placed with the Federal Aviation Administration.

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    Brian Rokos

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  • ‘Very humble’: Colleagues identify, honor couple killed in Truckee plane crash

    ‘Very humble’: Colleagues identify, honor couple killed in Truckee plane crash

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    Colleagues and former business partners are identifying the two victims of a fatal plane crash Saturday in Truckee as Liron and Naomi Petrushka.“They brought their entrepreneurial spirit and generosity to our fund, working with us and our founders on many pivotal milestones,” an UpWest spokesperson wrote on social media Sunday. “Their home was always open as were their big hearts. We are all heartbroken by this loss.”The update states Liron Petrushka joined UpWest in 2012. The company funds and fast-tracks Israeli startups entering into the US market, according to its LinkedIn page.“He has the pure intention of supporting the startup. He was a very founder-friendly investor,” said Iddo Tal, an entrepreneur based in Palo Alto. Tal shared that Petrushka was one of the first investors of his former company, Invi. “It’s really very amazing to see an entrepreneur — a very successful, a very successful investor – hands-on, mentor you, support you,” Tal said. “ a very humble, great human being.”Tal recalled flying with Petrushka in his airplane over San Francisco, recalling how much he loved to fly and how much fun he was. “It’s a big loss for us in the community in the Silicon Valley,” Tal said. “It’s big shoes to fill up and I hope all of us will just keep supporting the next generation of founders like he did.”The National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administration are investigating the crash. Officials said the single-engine plane crashed on Union Pacific Rail property, south of Glenshire Drive, between the rail line and Truckee River. The NTSB is asking anyone with surveillance video to contact investigators.“ such an inspiring guy,” Tal said. “I hope he rests in peace.”The couple leaves behind three sons.

    Colleagues and former business partners are identifying the two victims of a fatal plane crash Saturday in Truckee as Liron and Naomi Petrushka.

    “They brought their entrepreneurial spirit and generosity to our fund, working with us and our founders on many pivotal milestones,” an UpWest spokesperson wrote on social media Sunday. “Their home was always open as were their big hearts. We are all heartbroken by this loss.”

    The update states Liron Petrushka joined UpWest in 2012. The company funds and fast-tracks Israeli startups entering into the US market, according to its LinkedIn page.

    “He has the pure intention of supporting the startup. He was a very founder-friendly investor,” said Iddo Tal, an entrepreneur based in Palo Alto.

    Tal shared that Petrushka was one of the first investors of his former company, Invi.

    “It’s really very amazing to see an entrepreneur — a very successful, a very successful investor – hands-on, mentor you, support you,” Tal said. “[He was] a very humble, great human being.”

    Tal recalled flying with Petrushka in his airplane over San Francisco, recalling how much he loved to fly and how much fun he was.

    “It’s a big loss for us in the community in the Silicon Valley,” Tal said. “It’s big shoes to fill up and I hope all of us will just keep supporting the next generation of founders like he did.”

    The National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administration are investigating the crash. Officials said the single-engine plane crashed on Union Pacific Rail property, south of Glenshire Drive, between the rail line and Truckee River.

    The NTSB is asking anyone with surveillance video to contact investigators.

    “[He was] such an inspiring guy,” Tal said. “I hope he rests in peace.”

    The couple leaves behind three sons.

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  • Plane crash near Truckee under investigation

    Plane crash near Truckee under investigation

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    (FOX40.COM) — The Truckee Police Department said it is investigating a plane crash that happened on Saturday in Nevada County.

    Police said on Facebook just before 7:15 p.m. the crash happened near the area of Glenshire Drive and Olympic Boulevard.

    “At this time there is no threat to any structures and no road closures,” the Truckee Police Department said.

    The agency added that a heavy presence of emergency responders will be in the area for “an extended period.”

    This article will be updated with more information as it is made available.

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    Aydian Ahmad

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  • Crash of small private jet in rural Virginia kills all 5 on board, authorities say

    Crash of small private jet in rural Virginia kills all 5 on board, authorities say

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    Richmond, Va. — A small private jet crashed in woods and burned Sunday afternoon near a small airport in rural Virginia, killing all five people aboard, police said.

    The twin-engine IAI Astra 1125 went down amid trees along an airport road in Hot Springs, a community in the shadow of the Allegheny Mountains, killing the pilot and three other adults along with a child, Virginia State Police said in a statement.

    Emergency crew work at the site of a business jet crash in Hot springs
    Emergency crew work at the site of a business jet crash in Hot Springs, Bath County, Virginia, on March 10, 2024.

    The Recorder, Austin Hall / Handout via REUTERS


    Police and other emergency responders converged on the site in Bath County after the crash occurred about 3 p.m.

    A state police spokesman told The Associated Pressthe plane caught fire on impact. Investigators were working to confirm the origin of the flight and where it was flying to, Sgt. Rick Garletts said by email Sunday evening.

    “Small crash site, everything is burnt, meaning the tail numbers are unidentifiable,” Garletts said, adding state police were working with the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board to try to identify the flight details and the occupants.

    An FAA statement gave no preliminary information on the circumstances of the crash and said the agency and the NTSB will investigate.

    CBS Roanoke, Va. affiliate WDBJ-TV reports that the plane crashed at Ingalls Field Airport.

    Police told the station the flight originated in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and wasn’t scheduled to land at Ingalls Field, adding that it was trying to make an emergency landing when it ran short of the runway, hit several trees and crashed into a nearby hillside, causing a brush fire. It was quickly extinguished, WDBJ said.

    Photos showed what appeared to be plumes of white smoke rising from the impact site.

    The airport was closed in the aftermath of the crash.

    Hot Springs is about 165 miles west of Virginia’s capital, Richmond.

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  • 2 dead after small plane crashes east of the Twin Cities

    2 dead after small plane crashes east of the Twin Cities

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    Two men are dead after a plane crash, the wife of one says they were headed to Granite Falls


    Two men are dead after a plane crash, the wife of one says they were headed to Granite Falls

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    AFTON, Minn. — Two people are dead after a small plane crashed east of the Twin Cities on Saturday morning.

    According to the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, the crash occurred shortly before 9:45 a.m. near the 15000 block of Afton Hills Boulevard South. Several 911 calls were made by neighbors reporting “what sounded like a small explosion,” officials said.

    When first responders arrived, they found a small aircraft that had crashed in the yard of a residence near an attached garage. The plane was fully engulfed in flames, officials said.

    MORE NEWS: Wright County deputy fatally shoots driver during traffic stop, BCA investigating

    After fire crews extinguished the blaze, they located the bodies of an 85-year-old White Bear Lake man and a 68-year-old Baytown Township man.

    Family identifies 85-year-old Pat Moore from White Bear Lake as one of two men killed in a plane crash Saturday morning. Pat’s wife Vicky tells us the two men were headed to a museum in Granite Falls.

    Lisa lives just a few homes away from where the crash happened. She did not feel comfortable going on camera but says she couldn’t believe her eyes when she looked outside her window.

    “I actually saw a plane in the sky going straight down,” Lisa recalled.

    According to the National Transportation Safety Board, the model of the plane is a Global GC1. 

    inx-aerials-afton-plane-crash-030224.jpg

    WCCO


    The Federal Aviation Administration and NTSB are investigating the crash.

    WCCO News is actively looking into this story, so check back as more information becomes available. 

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    Cole Premo

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  • Victims identified in fatal fiery jet crash along I-75 near Naples

    Victims identified in fatal fiery jet crash along I-75 near Naples

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    COLLIER COUNTY, Fla. – The victims of Friday’s fiery fatal jet crash along Interstate 75 near Naples were identified by the Collier County Sheriff’s Office on Saturday afternoon.

    Five people were onboard the jet when it crashed, according to the Florida Aviation Administration.

    The two victims who died were pilot Edward Daniel Murphy, 50, of Oakland Park, along with second in command Ian Frederick Hofmann, 65, of Pompano Beach, CCSO officials announced on social media Saturday.

    The people who survived are crew member Sydney Ann Bosmans, 23, of Jupiter, as well as passengers Aaron Baker, 35, and Audra Green, 23, both of Columbus, Ohio, authorities confirmed.

    Five people were in The Bombardier Challenger 604 when it departed from Ohio State University’s airport in Columbus for Naples, according to the FAA.

    Murphy was trying to land at the Naples airport when there was an emergency, according to a recording of his communication with an airport controller.

    “Hop-A-Jet 823, lost both engines, emergency. I’m making an emergency landing. We’re clear to land but we’re not going to make the runway. We’ve lost both engines,” the pilot told the controller before the crash at about 3:15 p.m., on the southbound lanes of I-75.

    Local 10 News obtained video from good Samaritan Kyle Cavaliere showing the aftermath of the fiery crash that sent plumes of black smoke into the sky as three survivors walked away claiming both pilots were still inside.

    NTSB reported an investigator arrived at the site on Friday and several more were going to arrive on Saturday to “document the scene and examine the aircraft. The aircraft will then be recovered to a secure facility for further evaluation.”

    The plane is registered to Fort Lauderdale-based East Shore Aviation LLC, according to the FAA. Fort Lauderdale-based Hop-a-Jet lists it as part of the charter company’s fleet.

    A Local 10 News was at the crash scene Saturday evening where the charred jet suspended in the air as crews worked to remove the aircraft from the highway.

    Debris remained scattered as charred marks could be seen along the barrier wall of the highway.

    Federal authorities said a preliminary report about the cause of the crash can be expected in 30 days.

    Chris Hoffman, Frederick Hoffman’s son, created a GoFundMe account to honor his father’s memory.

    He wrote on the GoFundMe page that his father was “the ultimate professional pilot with over 40 years and 25,000 hours of experience at Piedmont, USAirways, Virgin America and Hopajet.”

    Click here if you would like to help donate.

    Copyright 2024 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.

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    Ryan Mackey, Samiar Nefzi

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  • Two dead, three survivors after plane crashes into vehicle while landing near Florida interstate

    Two dead, three survivors after plane crashes into vehicle while landing near Florida interstate

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    A small plane crashed near Interstate 75 in Collier County, Florida, on Friday. According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), a Bombardier Challenger 600 jet crashed around 3:15 p.m.Five people were reportedly on board.As of 4:40 p.m., the Collier County Sheriff’s Office confirmed two known fatalities. Officials said three people survived the crash. It is unknown if they were injured.According to the Florida Highway Patrol, the plane collided with a vehicle while landing. The plane was traveling down from Ohio, according to the Naples Airport. The plane lost an engine and was scheduled to leave Naples and head to Fort Lauderdale, the Naples Airport said. Sister station NBC2 in Fort Myers confirmed that the Naples Airport Tower was in contact with the plane before the crash.The plane left Fort Lauderdale at 9:15 a.m. Friday morning and landed in Columbus, Ohio at 11:57 a.m. Naples Air Traffic Controllers said the plane left Columbus at 1:02 p.m. Tracking of the flight stopped right before it crashed.Officials confirmed it was supposed to land in Naples and then head back to Fort Lauderdale at 3:30 p.m. The plane did not run out of fuel. Air traffic controllers said the fire was from the fuel.Listen here:The plane was cleared to make an emergency landing and was less than a minute away from landing on the runway when it crashed.In audio from the Air Traffic Control, the pilot can be heard calling in an emergency. The pilot said they lost both engines and were two miles away from the Naples Airport before saying they would not be able to make it. One National Transportation Safety Board investigator is at the crash scene Friday. Several more will be arriving on Saturday.A preliminary report about the cause of the crash can be expected in 30 days

    A small plane crashed near Interstate 75 in Collier County, Florida, on Friday.

    According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), a Bombardier Challenger 600 jet crashed around 3:15 p.m.

    Five people were reportedly on board.

    As of 4:40 p.m., the Collier County Sheriff’s Office confirmed two known fatalities. Officials said three people survived the crash. It is unknown if they were injured.

    According to the Florida Highway Patrol, the plane collided with a vehicle while landing.

    The plane was traveling down from Ohio, according to the Naples Airport.

    The plane lost an engine and was scheduled to leave Naples and head to Fort Lauderdale, the Naples Airport said.

    Sister station NBC2 in Fort Myers confirmed that the Naples Airport Tower was in contact with the plane before the crash.

    The plane left Fort Lauderdale at 9:15 a.m. Friday morning and landed in Columbus, Ohio at 11:57 a.m. Naples Air Traffic Controllers said the plane left Columbus at 1:02 p.m. Tracking of the flight stopped right before it crashed.

    Officials confirmed it was supposed to land in Naples and then head back to Fort Lauderdale at 3:30 p.m. The plane did not run out of fuel. Air traffic controllers said the fire was from the fuel.

    Listen here:

    The plane was cleared to make an emergency landing and was less than a minute away from landing on the runway when it crashed.

    In audio from the Air Traffic Control, the pilot can be heard calling in an emergency. The pilot said they lost both engines and were two miles away from the Naples Airport before saying they would not be able to make it.

    One National Transportation Safety Board investigator is at the crash scene Friday. Several more will be arriving on Saturday.

    A preliminary report about the cause of the crash can be expected in 30 days

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  • The 3 people killed when a small plane crashed into a Clearwater mobile home have been identified, police say

    The 3 people killed when a small plane crashed into a Clearwater mobile home have been identified, police say

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    3 die when small plane crashes into mobile home


    3 die when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home

    02:03

    The three people killed when a small plane crashed into a mobile home in Clearwater, Florida, on Thursday have been identified, police said Saturday. 

    The crash sparked a fire that damaged multiple surrounding homes in Bayside Estates, a large mobile home community, CBS News previously reported. The Federal Aviation Administration said that the victims included the pilot and two people on the ground.

    The pilot was identified as Jemin Patel, a 54-year-old man from Melbourne Beach, Florida, according to the Clearwater Police Department. Patel had taken off in the plane, a single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza V35, from Vero Beach earlier in the day. He was the only person aboard the aircraft. 

    The two people on the ground were identified as Clearwater resident Martha Parry, 86, who lived in the park, and Mary Ellen Pender, 54, who was visiting the mobile home. As many as nine people had been in the home shortly before the crash, but all but Parry and Pender had left, the police department said on Friday

    A fire ignited by a small plane crash engulfs a home in Clearwater, Florida, Feb. 1, 2024.
    A fire ignited by a small plane crash engulfs a home in Clearwater, Florida, Feb. 1, 2024.

    Ed Dean


    “Our thoughts are with the three victims and their families; this tragedy could have been even worse,” said Police Chief Eric Gandy on Friday. 

    The police department said previously that the Pinellas-Pasco Medical Examiner’s Office will determine the causes of death. 

    Patel had reported “some trouble” to air traffic controllers at the St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport just prior to the crash, CBS News previously reported, and the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that he had reported an “engine failure.”  

    The wreckage of the plane is expected to be removed on Saturday by the National Transportation Safety Board, according to the police department, as part of an investigation into the crash being conducted by the NTSB and the FAA. 

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  • 3 die when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home

    3 die when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home

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    3 die when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home – CBS News


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    Neighbors described the terrifying moments after a small plane crashed into a mobile home in Clearwater, Florida, Thursday night, killing the pilot and two people on the ground and sparking a large fire. Shortly before crashing, the pilot was heard saying “mayday,” officials said. Cristian Benavides has more.

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  • Several people killed when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home

    Several people killed when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home

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    Several people were killed when a small plane crashed into a mobile home in Clearwater, Florida, Thursday night, authorities said, sparking a fire that also damaged multiple surrounding homes.  

    The crash was reported at 7:08 p.m. in Bayside Estates, a large mobile home park, Clearwater Fire & Rescue Chief Scott Ehlers told reporters in a news briefing late Thursday night. Clearwater is located in the Tampa Bay area. 

    “I can confirm we have several fatalities both from the aircraft and within the mobile home,” Ehlers said. “We’re still working to make sure that there is no additional, and it’s limited to what we do know right now.”

    Several people killed when small plane crashes into Florida mobile home
    A small plane crashed into a mobile home in Clearwater, Florida. Feb. 1, 2023. 

    Clearwater Fire & Rescue


    The fire chief was unable to immediately say exactly how many people were killed, and the Federal Aviation Administration did not confirm how many people were aboard the plane.

    “The crews did a phenomenal job of getting the fire knocked down quickly,” Ehlers said, adding that crews were still working to put out hot spots and reach the victims.

    The FAA confirmed the crashed plane was a single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza V35.

    Ehlers said the plane crashed into only one home. However, the ensuing fire damaged at least two others, he disclosed.

    “The aircraft was found in the one structure, predominantly in that one structure,” Ehlers said.

    Just prior to the crash, Ehlers said, the pilot reported to air traffic controllers at St. Pete–Clearwater International Airport that the plane “had some trouble.”

    “During that conversation with air tower, the air tower lost them off radar, about three miles north of the runway,” Ehlers said. 

    The FAA said in its statement that the pilot reported an “engine failure.” Both the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board are responding and will investigate.

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  • Flying on a Boeing 737 Max 9? Here’s what to know.

    Flying on a Boeing 737 Max 9? Here’s what to know.

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    For the first time since Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliners were grounded after a mid-air blowout earlier this month, the aircraft are again carrying passengers — a prospect that might prompt questions among some travelers.

    Alaska Airlines resumed a limited number of flights with its Max 9s on Friday. United aims to follow suit on Sunday, but a spokeswoman said the airline might use them as spare planes Friday or Saturday.

    Those are the only two U.S. airlines that operate this particular model of the Boeing 737, which gained widespread attention earlier this month when a door plug blew out minutes after takeoff, exposing passengers to a gaping hole. 

    The Federal Aviation Administration has detailed the process that airlines must follow to inspect — and if necessary, repair — the panels called door plugs, one of which broke loose on Alaska Airlines flight 1282 on Jan. 5. The plugs are used to seal holes left for extra doors on the Max 9 when an unusually high number of seats requires more exits for safety reasons.

    FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker says his agency’s review of everything that has happened since the accident, including gathering information about inspections of door plugs on 40 other planes, gives him confidence that they will be safe so long as the new inspection process is followed.

    Why were the planes grounded?

    Alaska Airlines grounded all 65 of its Max 9 jets within hours after one of the two door plugs in the back half of the cabin of Flight 1282 blew away 16,000 feet above Oregon. The FAA grounded all Max 9s in the U.S. the day after the blowout.

    Even though none of the passengers were seriously injured, regulators acted quickly because the accident could have been far worse.

    By a stroke of luck, the two seats closest to the panel that blew off the plane were empty when flight 1282 took off from Portland, Oregon. And the plane had not yet reached a cruising altitude of more than 30,000 feet when passengers and flight attendants might have been walking around instead of being belted into their seats.

    Airlines found problems on other planes. Alaska CEO Ben Minicucci told NBC this week that “many” of the planes they inspected had loose bolts that are supposed to help secure the door plug to the airframe of the jet. United Airlines made similar similar findings.

    What is being done about it?

    The FAA is requiring airlines to conduct “detailed visual inspections” of the door plugs and other components, adjust fasteners and fix any damage they find before putting Max 9s back into service. The agency says the process was developed by what they learned from inspecting 40 grounded planes.

    United says the process involves removing an inner panel, two rows of seats and a sidewall liner from the cabin. Technicians open the door plug, inspect it and the surrounding hardware, and make any necessary repairs before resecuring the panel.

    In a statement, Alaska Airlines said it will only return those 737 Max 9s that have undergone “rigorous inspections.” Each plane must be deemed airworthy, according to FAA requirements, it added. 

    “The individual inspections are expected to take up to 12 hours per aircraft,” the airline said.

    Are travelers canceling flights on 737 Max 9 planes?

    Alaska Airlines officials said Thursday that they have lost a few sales among people purchasing flights into February — a phenomenon called “booking away” in the airline business. They didn’t say how many people have booked away from the Max 9, but they predicted it would only last a few weeks.

    Minicucci, the Alaska CEO, said “at first, people will have some questions, some anxiety,” but that “over time” confidence in the plane’s safety will be restored.

    Travelers returned to the Boeing 737 Max 8 after two of them crashed in 2018 and 2019, killing 346 people. In that case, Boeing had to redesign an automated flight-control system before the FAA would let Max 8s and Max 9s resume flying after a 20-month grounding.

    How can I tell the type of aircraft I’m booked on?

    Most people don’t bother to look up the type of plane they are booked to fly, although there was an uptick after flight 1282. Scott Keyes, founder of the travel site Going, said once FAA clears the planes to fly — and if there are no more incidents — the public’s memory will quickly fade.

    Airline websites typically now include the type of aircraft to be used on a particular flight, but finding the information varies.

    On American Airlines’ website, the type of plane shows up right on the search results page. On the United and Alaska sites, however, you will need to take one more step: Click on “details.” On Southwest Airlines, you’ll have to click on the flight number — it’s in blue — to see the aircraft type.

    What if I don’t want to fly on a Boeing 737 Max 9?

    United told CBS News that it will allow passengers who don’t want to fly on a Max 9 aircraft to change flights without additional cost, depending on seat availability. 

    Meanwhile, Alaska Airlines said that it still has its flexible travel policy in place, which will allow passengers to rebook their flights for travel through Feb. 9. 

    Is flying safe? 

    It’s much safer than driving and also safer than rail travel on a per-mile basis, according to U.S. Department of Transportation figures.

    Airline officials and aviation regulators like to point out that there has not been a fatal crash of a U.S. airliner since 2009. However, in the past year, there has been a sharp increase in close calls being investigated by federal officials.

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  • Russia’s state media says plane carrying 65 Ukrainian POWs crashes in Belgorod region

    Russia’s state media says plane carrying 65 Ukrainian POWs crashes in Belgorod region

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    A Russian plane carrying 65 Ukrainian prisoners of war crashed in Russia’s western Belgorod region, Russia’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported Wednesday, citing the Ministry of Defense. Six crew members and three people accompanying the POWs were also on board, RIA reported. Everyone on board the plane was killed, Belgorod regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said, according to The Associated Press.

    It was not immediately clear what caused the plane to crash. In a morning briefing, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said he did not have enough information to comment. Ukrainian officials warned against sharing information that had not been verified, the AP reported.

    “We emphasize that the enemy is actively conducting information special operations against Ukraine aimed at destabilizing Ukrainian society,” Ukraine’s Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War said in a statement on social media.

    russia-ukraine-pow-plane-crash-grab.jpg
    An image taken from video obtained by Reuters shows a fireball erupting near the town of Yablonovo, in Russia’s western Belgorod region, reportedly from the scene of a military plane crash.

    Obtained by Reuters


    Unverified video on social media appeared to show a plane falling from the sky and then a huge ball of flames erupting where it looked like the plane hit the ground. A small puff of smoke was visible in the sky where the plane had been spotted before crashing.

    RIA, citing Russia’s Ministry of Defense, said the Ukrainian POWs were being transported to the border region for a prisoner swap. The ministry said a special military commission was on its way to the site of the crash.

    There have been a number of Russian military plane crashes recently, which some say is due to an increased number of flights amid Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, according to the AP.

    Russian military plane crashed in Belgorod region

    Omar Zaghloul/Anadolu/Getty


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  • Actor Christian Oliver and 2 young daughters killed in Caribbean plane crash

    Actor Christian Oliver and 2 young daughters killed in Caribbean plane crash

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    Actor Christian Oliver, his two young daughters and the pilot of a small plane are dead after the aircraft crashed into the Caribbean Sea, authorities said Friday. 

    The Royal St. Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force said in a statement that Oliver, 51, identified in the statement by his real name Christian Klesper, and daughters Madita, 10, and Annik, 12, were on board the small plane. The pilot was identified as area resident and plane owner Robert Sachs. The U.S. State Department said Sachs was also an American. 

    Premiere Of USA Network's "The Sinner" Season 3 - Red Carpet
    Christian Oliver at a 2020 red carpet event. 

    Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images


    Representatives for Oliver also confirmed his death, telling CBS News in a statement that their “thoughts and prayers are with him, his two daughters and his family.” 

    The police force said that the plane had crashed into the sea about a mile off the coast of Petit Nevis sometime after midday. The plane was traveling to St. Lucia, about 65 miles away, authorities said, but moments after taking off, it “experienced difficulties and plummeted into the ocean.” 

    Local fishermen and divers approached the scene after the crash, officials said. Divers recovered the bodies, according to authorities, and transferred them to the members of the Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Coast Guard that had arrived on the scene. 

    415491439-681192280841020-6224189335303043210-n.jpg
    The plane that Christian Oliver, his daughters and Robert Sachs were in. 

    Royal St. Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force


    All four people on the plane were confirmed dead by a medical practitioner, authorities said. Post-mortem examinations will determine the causes of death. 

    The plane crash remains under investigation, the Royal St. Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force said. The Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority told CBS News that it is “currently in the process of gathering information to assist in the investigation.” 

    The State Department said it is providing “all appropriate consular assistance” to the families of the victims. 

    Oliver, who was born in Germany and is best known for the 2008 film “Speed Racer,” posted on New Year’s Day that he and his family were “somewhere in paradise.” 

    He also appeared in the films “The Good German” and “Valkyrie,” according to his website.

    According to his iMDB page, Oliver will appear in two upcoming movies. One, “London Blue,” is in post-production but does not yet have a release date. The other film, “Forever Hold Your Peace,” is still in production. The film’s director, Nick Lyon, said in an Instagram post that the film had recently finished filming. 

    “We talked about producing a film together for years and finally did it,” Lyon wrote, adding this was the fifth project they had worked on together. “Thank you for being a great colleague, actor and friend.” 

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  • First responders in Japan struggling to reach hard hit areas after earthquake kills dozens

    First responders in Japan struggling to reach hard hit areas after earthquake kills dozens

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    First responders in Japan struggling to reach hard hit areas after earthquake kills dozens – CBS News


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    First responders in Japan are struggling to reach the areas worst affected by Monday’s string of powerful earthquakes that killed dozens of people and destroyed thousands of homes. As CBS News’ Elizabeth Palmer reports, efforts to reach the areas by air continue despite Tuesday’s dramatic plane crash at Tokyo’s main airport.

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  • Japanese Airlines plane bursts into flames after collision with coast guard plane

    Japanese Airlines plane bursts into flames after collision with coast guard plane

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    Japanese Airlines plane bursts into flames after collision with coast guard plane – CBS News


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    A Japanese Airlines plane burst into flames after it collided with a coast guard plane that was delivering relief supplies following a deadly earthquake. Miraculously, everyone on the airliner escaped. Elizabeth Palmer reports.

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  • U.S. military Osprey aircraft crashes into ocean off Japan’s coast, nation’s coast guard says

    U.S. military Osprey aircraft crashes into ocean off Japan’s coast, nation’s coast guard says

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    A U.S. military Osprey aircraft crashed into the ocean near the southern Japanese island of Yakushima on Wednesday with eight people on board, Japan’s coast guard said. The U.S. military in Japan offered no immediate comment on the incident, but Japanese coast guard spokesperson Kazuo Ogawa was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying it had received an emergency call from a fishing boat reporting the crash.

    Ogawa said it was unclear what happened to the aircraft or the eight people believed to have been on board, but coast guard personnel were responding. Japan’s national broadcaster NHK said three of the crew members had been recovered, but it provided no information on their condition. 

    CBS News’ Japanese partner network TBS cited coast guard officials as saying the service had flown over the crash site and spotted debris, and NHK aired video from a helicopter showing a Japanese Coast Guard vessel at the site, with one bright orange inflatable life raft seen on the water, but nobody in it.

    Australia US Aircraft Crash
    A MV-22B Osprey is seen coming in to land on the USS America off the coast of Brisbane, Australia, in a June 20, 2023 file photo. 

    Darren England/AP


    NHK said an eyewitness reported seeing the aircraft’s left engine on fire before it went down about 600 miles southwest of Tokyo, off the east coast of Yakushima.

    Japan’s Kyodo News cited coast guard officials as saying the emergency call came in around 2:45 p.m. local time (12:45 a.m. Eastern), and it said the Japanese Defense Ministry reported the Osprey dropping off radar screens about five minutes before that.

    An Osprey can take off and land vertically like a helicopter but then change the angle of its twin rotors to fly as a turbo prop plane once airborne.

    The Japanese government approved last year a new $8.6 billion, five-year host-nation support budget to cover the cost of hosting American troops in the country, reflecting a growing emphasis on integration between the two countries’ forces and a focus on joint response and deterrence amid rising threats from ChinaNorth Korea and Russia.

    The Osprey involved in the crash was assigned to Yokota Air Force Base outside Tokyo, NHK reported, but it said the aircraft had departed Wednesday from a smaller U.S. air station to fly to Kadena Air Base on Okinawa, which is in the same island chain as Kakushima. 

    The U.S. military’s Kadena Air Base is the most important and largest American base in the region.

    There have been a spate of fatal U.S. Osprey crashes in recent years, most recently an aircraft that went down during a multinational training exercise on an Australian island in August, killing three U.S. Marines and leaving eight others hospitalized. All five U.S. Marines on board another Osprey died the previous summer when the aircraft crashed in the California desert. 

    CBS News’ Elizabeth Palmer and Lucy Craft in Tokyo contributed to this report.

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  • Navy plane overshoots runway, lands in water in Hawaii

    Navy plane overshoots runway, lands in water in Hawaii

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    Navy plane overshoots runway, lands in water in Hawaii – CBS News


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    A Navy plane overshot a Marine base runway and landed in the water near Honolulu, Hawaii. All nine people aboard made it safely to shore.

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  • After crash-landing, pilot spends 9 hours in Florida Everglades before being rescued

    After crash-landing, pilot spends 9 hours in Florida Everglades before being rescued

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    After crash-landing, pilot spends 9 hours in Florida Everglades before being rescued – CBS News


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    The pilot of a small plane that crash-landed in the swampy Florida Everglades spent nine hours waiting for help before he was hoisted to safety by rescuers Tuesday.

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  • Dramatic video shows plane moments before it crashed into Oregon home, killing 22-year-old instructor and 20-year-old student pilot

    Dramatic video shows plane moments before it crashed into Oregon home, killing 22-year-old instructor and 20-year-old student pilot

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    Oregon officials have identified the victims who lost their lives after a small plane precipitously dropped out of the sky and crashed through the roof of a home on Tuesday as video emerged showing the aircraft spiraling out of control to the ground.

    Police in Newberg, a small city about 25 miles southwest of Portland, said 20-year-old Barrett Bevacqua and 22-year-old Michele Cavallotti were the two victims found dead at the scene. Cavallotti was an instructor at the pilot training school Hillsboro Aero Academy and Bevacqua was a student pilot, the Newburg-Dundee Police Department said in a news release.

    The third passenger, 20-year-old Emily Hurd, was airlifted to a hospital with serious injuries. A social media post from a woman who says she is Hurd’s mother says she was in surgery all night Tuesday with several broken bones but her “spinal cord is intact.” 

    tualatin-valley-fire-and-rescue.jpg
    Two people were killed and and another sustained injuries after a small airplane crashed through the roof of a home in northwestern Oregon on Tuesday night, authorities said. 

    Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue / Facebook


    Dramatic video taken Tuesday evening showed the plane rapidly descending straight down toward the ground. The aircraft crashed through the roof of a home with its wreckage strewn partially inside the house and in the backyard, Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue said in a news release.

    Multiple people were inside the home when the crash occurred, but they were able to evacuate safely, the release said. Nobody on the ground was injured.

    Search and rescue crews were sent to inspect the structural stability of the home. Neither the home nor the aircraft caught fire, officials said. The Red Cross is assisting the family that was displaced.

    Micah Schauer, the 22-year-old Newberg resident who took the video of the plane spiraling downward, said he was leaving his home when he glimpsed what at first looked like a piece of cardboard falling from the sky.

    “I didn’t think it was a real plane at all at first,” Schauer said. It wasn’t until about halfway through the 10-second video that the realization dawned on him, he said.

    In disbelief, he sent the video to his girlfriend and family.

    “I sent a mass text, like, ‘Is that real? Did this happen?’ ” Schauer said. “They were shocked.”

    Schauer then went to the site of the crash, where a chaotic scene was unfolding.

    “It’s such a small town, everybody wanted to go see it,” he said. “Life Flight ended up landing right next to me. … It was wild. I’ve never seen anything quite like that, ever.”

    The small Piper PA-44 Seminole plane crashed around 6:45 p.m. Tuesday, National Transportation Safety Board investigator Eric Gutierrez said at a news conference in Newberg on Wednesday. Multiple agencies responded, finding the plane in the back of a house.

    Authorities worked to get Hurd out of the plane first so she could be taken to a hospital and then turned to extricating the two others who had died, Patrick Fale, assistant chief of Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue, said at the news conference.

    It is not yet known why the plane crashed, officials said, adding that they didn’t yet know if a distress call had been made. Gutierrez said investigators will review the plane’s maintenance records, pilot records and weather conditions at the time, among other things.

    Gaining access to the plane was difficult because the majority of it remained in the house Wednesday morning, Gutierrez said. Crews were working to move the plane to a secure facility Wednesday afternoon where investigators could do a more thorough examination of the aircraft.

    It could take from 18 to 24 months for a plane crash report to be finished and released, Gutierrez said.

    A certified flight instructor told CBS affiliate KOIN-TV that the type of plane that crashed is common for pilot training.

    “We’re going to be looking at everything. Flight training programs, experience of the pilots, what was going on with the flight track information. I’m trying to not go down one specific thing, we try to gather as much data as we can going forward,” Eric Gutierrez, an air safety investigator, told KOIN-TV.

    The Newberg-Dundee Police Department is partnering with the Yamhill County Medical Examiner and District Attorney’s Office to determine a precise cause of death. The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board have taken over the investigation related to the cause of the crash.

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