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Investigation underway into fatal Hudson River helicopter crash

Investigation underway into fatal Hudson River helicopter crash

NBC News11-04-2025

A family of five Spanish tourists and the pilot were killed when a sightseeing helicopter plunged into the Hudson River on Thursday. The NTSB says most of the helicopter has been recovered, but divers are still searching for the main rotor. NBC's Sam Brock reports.

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NTSB finds a fuel leak and improperly installed parts in the engine of an airliner that caught fire
NTSB finds a fuel leak and improperly installed parts in the engine of an airliner that caught fire

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • The Independent

NTSB finds a fuel leak and improperly installed parts in the engine of an airliner that caught fire

A fuel leak and several improperly installed parts were found inside the engine of an American Airlines plane that caught fire after the plane landed in Denver in March, according to a new report released Thursday. The National Transportation Safety Board said one part inside the right engine of the Boeing 737-800 was loose and had been installed in an incorrect direction and that fuel was leaking from the fitting of another part that was incorrectly fastened. The preliminary findings don't identify the cause of the fire because the NTSB won't reach that conclusion until after it completes its investigation sometime next year. But former NTSB and FAA investigator Jeff Guzzetti said the problems investigators found in the engine appear to be the source of the fuel that caught fire. 'To me, it looks like improper maintenance in the right engine leading to a fuel leak,' Guzzetti said after reading the NTSB report. Photos and videos posted online showed billowing smoke and passengers standing on the plane's wing after it taxied to a gate at Denver International Airport. Twelve people were taken to the hospital with minor injuries. The plane carried 172 passengers and six crew. The NTSB said gate workers extinguished the fire within a minute even before firefighters arrived and doused lingering hot spots on the plane. Pictures included in the NTSB report show streaks on the outside of the engine from the leaking fuel, and airport video showed a trail of fluid leaking from under the right engine as the airplane taxied into the gate. Guzzetti said he believes those streaks were probably made while the plane was flying. After it landed, he said, the fuel likely pooled inside the engine and caught fire. The American Airlines flight had left Colorado Springs Airport and was bound for Dallas Fort Worth when it diverted to Denver on March 13 after the crew reported high engine vibrations. The plane's right engine caught fire after it arrived at the gate. Passengers started yelling 'fire' and 'smoke' shortly after the plane pulled up to the gate, and flight attendants saw smoke start to fill the cabin, according to the NTSB report. The flight attendants tried calling the flight crew and knocking on the cockpit door, but didn't get an answer. So the report said the flight attendants initiated the evacuation. Passengers were able to use the jetway at the front left door and the escape slide at the right rear door as well as the left over-wing doors to evacuate. But the left rear door wouldn't open, and maintenance personnel discovered afterward that the escape slide jammed in the door. The faulty slide was sent to the manufacturer for further investigation. The country has seen a recent spate of aviation disasters and close calls stoking fears about air travel, though flying remains a very safe mode of transportation.

Gangland feud whistleblower believes the 'cancer of organised crime' has been allowed to fester
Gangland feud whistleblower believes the 'cancer of organised crime' has been allowed to fester

Edinburgh Live

time3 days ago

  • Edinburgh Live

Gangland feud whistleblower believes the 'cancer of organised crime' has been allowed to fester

Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info The whistleblower who first exposed the criminal activities of the Lyons family 25 years ago has slammed both police and politicians for ignoring his warnings. Billy McAllister, a former SNP councillor, said that the current murderous feud with the Daniel crime clan could have been avoided had the authorities listened to him at the time. It comes after detectives in Spain stepped up their hunt for the killers of Lyons gang members Ross Monaghan and Eddie Lyons jnr. The gangsters were shot dead in an Irish bar owned by Monaghan in the Spanish holiday resort of Fuengirola by a lone gunman who escaped in a waiting car. Back in 2000, Billy first exposed the Lyons family's involvement in the running of the public funded Chirnsyde Community Initiative in Milton, Glasgow. His complaints that the community centre was a cover for organised crime were dismissed for years by both the police and Glasgow City Council. However that all changed in 2006 when Lyons family member Michael Lyons was shot dead in a Glasgow garage by two associates of the Daniel family, Raymond Anderson and James McDonald. The victim's cousin Steven Lyons was seriously injured by the gunmen as was Lyons associate Robert Pickett. Glasgow City Council finally shut down Chirnsyde and evicted members of the Lyons family from the community centre a few days later. At the time a young Ross Monaghan and Eddie Lyons Jnr were both members of the Club Boys - a group of young aspiring criminals attached to the centre. Sign up for Edinburgh Live newsletters for more headlines straight to your inbox Billy, who is a former SNP councillor, said the latest bloodshed which saw both men murdered in cold blood on Saturday night was avoidable and preventable had the authorities taken action much sooner. He added: "It's shocking that two young men have lost their lives, but what is more shocking is the fact that the assassination was in a public bar where members of the public were going about their lawful business, having a good night out and their lives where put in danger. "Surely given all the intelligence and information they (the police) have on these criminals how was this allowed to happen? "It was wrong for the police and politicians to ignore us. If they had done an early intervention then maybe a lot of people might just be still living. Now 25 years later the feud is still ongoing and they (the police) are losing the war." It's estimated that the Lyons run community centre received more than £1.4 million in taxpayers money before it was finally closed down. By this time the Lyons had established themselves as a major organised crime group, at war with their Daniel rivals. Billy added: "The origins of the feud was all drug related, and control of that market. "The Lyons along with the Daniel's were determined to control the north of the city at that time. "They always hated each other going away back to when they where petty criminals. We kept on complaining but they just ignored it, but low and behold it all came out at the end." Billy won election to Glasgow City Council in 2006 as a local councillor in Milton by vowing to evict the Lyons crime gang from Chirnsyde. He continued: "A top policeman told me that the police and politicians had left the cancer of serious and organised crime too long without addressing the problem head on. "That's why criminality is a growth industry, the risks are very low of getting caught. "The Lyons could have been taken out when they where petty criminals but they have been allowed to go undetected and look where we are now." The long running feud was reignited in March this year when the Daniel family and associates were targeted in a series of fire bombings and other attacks. The man alleged to have orchestrated the most recent violence is former Rangers ultra 31 year old Ross McGill who is based in Dubai and said to have close links to the Lyons. His gang Tamo Junto have laid the blame for the double murder on a major gangland figure, said to be a key associate of the Daniel family. It's claimed the Lyons had been feeding McGill information to help his gang track their Daniel targets in Edinburgh and Glasgow. The deaths of Monaghan and Lyons Jnr is the most dramatic escalation of the feud to date which has largely been played out in public. In 2010 feared Daniel enforcer and family member Kevin Carroll was shot dead by two men in the car park of an ASDA store in Robroyston, Glasgow. Two years later Ross Monaghan stood trial at the High Court in Glasgow for the murder but walked free after a judge ruled there was no case to answer. In 2017 Monaghan was shot while dropping off his daughter at her primary school in Penilee, Glasgow but escaped with minor injuries. He then relocated to Spain where he opened Monaghan's Bar. Police Scotland has so far arrested 41 people over the most recent incidents in Edinburgh and Glasgow as part of Operation Portaledge. In a statement they said they did not believe they were linked to the weekend fatal shootings in Spain. However there are fears that both murders have taken the Lyons-Daniel feud to a whole new level with the prospect of further violence and retribution.

King marks 400 years of the Queen's Chapel at service with royal fanfare
King marks 400 years of the Queen's Chapel at service with royal fanfare

South Wales Argus

time3 days ago

  • South Wales Argus

King marks 400 years of the Queen's Chapel at service with royal fanfare

Horns rang out as His Majesty entered the chapel, a stone's throw from Buckingham Palace, on Wednesday evening. The King meeting choristers after a service celebrating 400 years of The Queen's Chapel (Aaron Chown/PA) He took his seat beside Princess Alexandra for the 40-minute service – attended by around 200 people. It featured music by the Gentlemen and Children of His Majesty's Chapel Royal Choir, accompanied by the Duchess of Edinburgh's String Orchestra and the State Trumpeters of the Household Cavalry Band. The service reflected the chapel's early role as a place of worship for European courtiers. After the celebration, the King viewed a newly commissioned piece of altar plate – the His Majesty King Charles III Ciboria – the first addition to the chapel's silverware since 1688. Made by St Ives silversmith Tim Lukes, the ceremonial cup includes the image of the Green Man, a symbol used during the King's Coronation. Charles views the new 'His Majesty King Charles III Ciboria', the first new piece of Chapel plate since 1688 (Aaron Chown/PA) Outside huge crowds gathered to catch a glimpse of the King whilst police held up traffic. Later, inside Friary Court, His Majesty shared a laugh with children from the Chapel Royal Choir. He could be heard asking the youngsters: 'You've been practicing already, have you?' Built in 1625, the Queen's Chapel was originally intended for the wedding of the future Charles I to Spanish princess Maria Anna. It was later restored by Christopher Wren and has been part of the Chapel Royal since 1938.

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