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Plane Crashes in a Field and First Responders Find Blood Inside the Cockpit. The Pilot Is Still Missing
Plane Crashes in a Field and First Responders Find Blood Inside the Cockpit. The Pilot Is Still Missing

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Plane Crashes in a Field and First Responders Find Blood Inside the Cockpit. The Pilot Is Still Missing

A small plane crashed in Alabama, and authorities have not been able to track down the pilot or the plane's owner Officials in Baldwin County were notified about the crash on the morning of June 27, although the Cessna 182 aircraft is believed to have crashed on the evening of June 26 First responders found broken glass and blood in the cockpitA plane crash in Alabama has left authorities with many questions after the aircraft was left empty in a field with the pilot was nowhere to be found. The Elberta Volunteer Fire Department was notified around 10 a.m. local time on Friday, June 27, about a crash involving a small Cessna 182 aircraft, according to reports from local outlets WKRG News 5, and NBC 15 News. The plane had crashed into a field and flipped upside down in Baldwin County, located on the Gulf Coast, just east of Mobile. The single-engine plane is believed to have initially crashed sometime on the evening of Thursday, June 26. Authorities told the outlets that when they arrived at the scene — at the corner of Gardner Road and County Road 95 — broken glass and blood was found inside the two-seater plane, but the pilot was missing. Baldwin County Emergency Management Director Tom Tyler told that there were tire marks in the field where the plane crashed. 'It was flipped upside down and the occupants were no longer there. They apparently had walked away and were transported somewhere,' he said. WKRG reported that officials have been trying to contact the plane's owner and the missing pilot. Photos of the crash obtained by the outlet showed that the plane's wing may have been damaged when it hit the ground. According to Tyler, first responders and emergency personnel were ready to administer first aid to the pilot and any passengers. 'We were not called to the scene to provide any assistance,' Tyler told 'We were standing by [if] there was need.' "They had about 50 gallons of fuel onboard," he added to WKRG. "But there was no leaking or no oil that the first responders could see." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. According to the EMA director, no area hospitals have reported a person with any injuries matching the description of this incident. "I've not been told of anybody self-reporting to a hospital for any kind of injuries associated with this," he told WKRG. Partial FlightRadar24 data obtained by NBC showed the plane circling Orange Beach area — a coastal city in Baldwin County — before heading north. No further data was available about the plane's flight Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) will visit the crash site on June 30 to investigate, the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office told the outlets. PEOPLE reached out to the FFA on Saturday, June 28, for further information, but did not receive an immediate response. Read the original article on People

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