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All 6 killed after plane crashes into ocean near San Diego

All 6 killed after plane crashes into ocean near San Diego

Yahooa day ago

The Brief
All six people aboard a twin-engine Cessna 414 died after the plane crashed into the ocean near San Diego.
The pilot reported trouble maintaining altitude and twice turned toward shore before the crash, according to audio and radar data.
The FAA and NTSB are investigating, and the victims have not yet been officially identified.
Six people were killed after a plane crashed into the ocean 5 miles off the coast near San Diego, authorities said.
What we know
The twin-engine Cessna 414 crashed at around 12:30 p.m. Sunday, not long after it took off, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The plane was returning to Phoenix one day after flying out from Arizona, according to the flight tracking website Flightaware.com.
Searchers found a debris field later Sunday about 5 miles off the coast of Point Loma, a San Diego neighborhood that juts into the Pacific, U.S. Coast Guard officials. The water in the search area is about 200 feet (61 meters) deep.
The pilot told air traffic controllers that he was struggling to maintain his heading and climb as the plane twice turned towards shore before going back out to sea, according to audio posted by www.LiveATC.net and radar data posted by FlightAware. The controller urged the pilot to climb to 4,000 feet after he reported the plane was only about 1,000 feet in the air.
The controller directed the pilot to land at a nearby U.S. naval airport on Coronado Island, but the pilot said he was unable to see the airport. A short time later, the pilot repeatedly signaled the "Mayday" distress call before controllers lost radar contact.
What we don't know
Although the FAA said all six people on board the plane were killed, authorities haven't identified them.
Dig deeper
The FAA said the plane is owned by vitamin and nutritional supplement maker Optimal Health Systems. But the company based in Pima, Arizona, said in a statement that it sold the plane to a group of private individuals in 2023, meaning the FAA database could be out of date.
However, the company's founder, Doug Grant, said in the statement that, "We personally know several of the passengers onboard and our sincerest condolences are offered to those affected by the tragedy, all of whom are incredible members of our small community."
The crash comes weeks after a small Cessna crashed into a San Diego neighborhood in foggy weather and killed six people.
What's next
The National Transportation Safety Board and FAA confirmed they are investigating the crash.
Local perspective
A man who was out surfing when the plane crashed told NBC 7 in San Diego that he saw the plane come down at an angle, then climb back into the clouds before diving again and crashing into the water.
"The next time he came out of the clouds, he went straight into the water. But after I saw this splash, about six seconds later, it was dead silent. I knew that they went in the water, nose first, at a high speed," Tyson Wislofsky said.
The Source
The Associated Press contributed to this report. The information in this story comes from official statements by the U.S. Coast Guard and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). This story was reported from Los Angeles.

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