
Six people killed as small plane crashes minutes after takeoff in Ohio
The Cessna 441 with six people on board crashed near Youngstown-Warren regional airport on Sunday morning, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Authorities remained on the scene on Monday.
There were no survivors, Anthony Trevena, the executive director of Western Reserve Port Authority, said at a news conference. The victims were taken to the Trumbull county coroner's office, Trevena said, but he did not release their names.
It was difficult to get to the site of the crash, the Howland Township fire chief, Raymond Pace, said.
'We're very fortunate. This is a extremely tragic situation, but it could have been worse,' Pace said, noting that there were three houses near the spot where the plane crashed.
Publicly available flight tracking data showed that the plane's destination was Bozeman, Montana, said Michael Hillman, president of the aviation company JETS FBO Network.
'These were the best of the best in terms of the folks here at the field, as well as the pilots. I can't say enough about them,' Hillman said at the news conference. 'I'd give anything to rewind the day and take them to breakfast instead.'
The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate and the NSTB will lead the investigation.
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Daily Mail
8 hours ago
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He added: 'The AAIB has begun a full investigation into it. It is being probed from all angles, including any possible sabotage. 'The CCTV footage are being reviewed and all angles are being assessed, several agencies are working on it.' The Aircraft Accidents Investigation Bureau is now pouring over the footage that should enable them to create a second-by-second reconstruction of events as they unfolded. The Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) captures all audio from the cockpit, including pilot conversations, radio transmissions, warning alarms and ambient mechanical sounds. It will allow investigators to finally understand what happened in the moments leading up to one of the world's worst aviation disasters in a decade. 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Location: The siblings had been a few seats apart onboard the plane, with survivor Vishwash sitting at 11A and his younger brother positioned at 11J on the other side of the aisle Mr Pierson, who previously spoke of manufacturing concerns of the company's 737 Max aircraft told NDTV production facilities for that plane in particular, were 'chaotic and dangerous'. 'There were a lot of indications of chaotic and dangerous manufacturing. We were rushing to build the planes to get them out of the door. Employees were pressured to get their work done. 'There was parts issues. We had aircraft systems issues that I remembered we were having difficulty with. And I remember being very concerned that we were taking unnecessary risks,' he added. Air India flight 171's crash came just weeks after Boeing came to a £1.1billion settlement with the US justice department to avoid prosecution over two crashes in 2018 and 2019 involving its 737 MAX model.