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Pilot lands small plane in Long Island Sound, calls 911 to report location before rescue
Pilot lands small plane in Long Island Sound, calls 911 to report location before rescue

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • General
  • The Independent

Pilot lands small plane in Long Island Sound, calls 911 to report location before rescue

The pilot of a small plane that was about to crash managed to land it safely in the cool, choppy waters of Long Island Sound off Connecticut and called 911 to provide his precise coordinates before the aircraft sank, authorities said Monday. The Coast Guard pulled two people wearing lifejackets from the water shortly before 11 a.m. on Sunday, about a half-hour after the plane went down a few miles (kilometers) off the coast of Branford, Connecticut, officials said. The survivors were treated for minor injuries and hypothermia symptoms, and brought to a hospital, the Branford Fire Department said. 'We arrived shortly after the Coast Guard,' Branford Fire Chief Thomas Mahoney said. 'The Coast Guard did a great job in responding to the area, retrieving the people out of the water before things got worse. And the pilot obviously did a really good job of landing the plane in choppy seas. Those outcomes don't always come out as well as this did.' The water temperature at the time was about 60 degrees F (15.6 degrees C), according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Mahoney said the seas were a choppy 3 to 6 feet (1 to 2 meters). The single-engine Piper PA-32-300 Cherokee Six took off from Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford, Connecticut, shortly before 10:14 a.m. and was in the air for about 12 minutes when it went down, according to the flight-tracking company FlightAware. About 10 minutes into the flight, the pilot declared an emergency and contacted air traffic controllers in New York, who directed them to try to land about 8 miles (13 kilometers) away at Tweed-New Haven Airport, according to Andrew King, a spokesperson for Avports, which manages Tweed-New Haven. Tweed-New Haven officials prepared a runway for a possible emergency landing. But air traffic controllers lost contact with the plane, King said. Mahoney said after the plane went into the water, the pilot used a cellphone to call 911 and report his plane crashed into Long Island Sound and was taking on water. The aircraft was completely submerged when rescuers arrived. State and federal records indicate the plane is owned by a limited-liability company based in Newtown, Connecticut, and the company's principal is James Edwards. Edwards declined to comment Monday. The crash occurred near Outer Island, an archipelago of about two dozen islands off the Connecticut coast. The National Transportation Safety Board said it was waiting for the recovery of the aircraft to determine the level of damage before deciding whether an NTSB investigation is warranted.

Pilot lands small plane in Long Island Sound, calls 911 to report location before rescue
Pilot lands small plane in Long Island Sound, calls 911 to report location before rescue

Associated Press

time2 days ago

  • General
  • Associated Press

Pilot lands small plane in Long Island Sound, calls 911 to report location before rescue

The pilot of a small plane that was about to crash managed to land it safely in the cool, choppy waters of Long Island Sound off Connecticut and called 911 to provide his precise coordinates before the aircraft sank, authorities said Monday. The Coast Guard pulled two people wearing lifejackets from the water shortly before 11 a.m. on Sunday, about a half-hour after the plane went down a few miles (kilometers) off the coast of Branford, Connecticut, officials said. The survivors were treated for minor injuries and hypothermia symptoms, and brought to a hospital, the Branford Fire Department said. 'We arrived shortly after the Coast Guard,' Branford Fire Chief Thomas Mahoney said. 'The Coast Guard did a great job in responding to the area, retrieving the people out of the water before things got worse. And the pilot obviously did a really good job of landing the plane in choppy seas. Those outcomes don't always come out as well as this did.' The water temperature at the time was about 60 degrees F (15.6 degrees C), according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Mahoney said the seas were a choppy 3 to 6 feet (1 to 2 meters). The single-engine Piper PA-32-300 Cherokee Six took off from Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford, Connecticut, shortly before 10:14 a.m. and was in the air for about 12 minutes when it went down, according to the flight-tracking company FlightAware. About 10 minutes into the flight, the pilot declared an emergency and contacted air traffic controllers in New York, who directed them to try to land about 8 miles (13 kilometers) away at Tweed-New Haven Airport, according to Andrew King, a spokesperson for Avports, which manages Tweed-New Haven. Tweed-New Haven officials prepared a runway for a possible emergency landing. But air traffic controllers lost contact with the plane, King said. Mahoney said after the plane went into the water, the pilot used a cellphone to call 911 and report his plane crashed into Long Island Sound and was taking on water. The aircraft was completely submerged when rescuers arrived. State and federal records indicate the plane is owned by a limited-liability company based in Newtown, Connecticut, and the company's principal is James Edwards. Edwards declined to comment Monday. The crash occurred near Outer Island, an archipelago of about two dozen islands off the Connecticut coast. The National Transportation Safety Board said it was waiting for the recovery of the aircraft to determine the level of damage before deciding whether an NTSB investigation is warranted.

BREAKING NEWS Plane crashes off coast of Connecticut as two survivors are pulled from Long Island Sound
BREAKING NEWS Plane crashes off coast of Connecticut as two survivors are pulled from Long Island Sound

Daily Mail​

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Plane crashes off coast of Connecticut as two survivors are pulled from Long Island Sound

A small plane has crashed into the Long Island Sound off the coast of Connecticut as emergency crews rushed to rescue those on board. The Piper PA-32 went down on Sunday morning just ten minutes after it took off from Bridgeport. Before the plane went down, a call for assistance was made and the plane was directed to the Tweed New Haven Airport for an emergency landing, Newsday reported. The aircraft crashed and sunk into the water with its occupants suffering minor injuries, according to the coast guard. New Haven Operations Fire Chief Danny Coughlin said first responders rescued the two people on board the aircraft six miles off the coast of New Haven, the Stamford Advocate reported. 'They were wet, cold, and had some cuts on the hands and face,' a Coast Guard spokesperson told Newsday. Both occupants have been reported to be in stable condition.

Small plane crashes into Long Island Sound, 2 people rescued, U.S. Coast Guard says
Small plane crashes into Long Island Sound, 2 people rescued, U.S. Coast Guard says

CBS News

time3 days ago

  • General
  • CBS News

Small plane crashes into Long Island Sound, 2 people rescued, U.S. Coast Guard says

Two people were rescued after a small plane crashed into Long Island Sound off the coast of Connecticut, the U.S. Coast Guard says. The plane went down Sunday morning southeast of the Thimble Islands, located near Branford, according to the Coast Guard. FAA investigating small plane crash in Connecticut The Federal Aviation Administration said it was investigating the crash of a Piper PA-32 with two people on board in the waters south of Tweed New Haven Airport at around 10:30 a.m. "Coast Guard Station New Haven dispatched a 45-foot small boat after the Sector Long Island Sound Command Center received notification from the Air Traffic Control tower," the Coast Guard said in a statement to CBS News New York. The two people were in stable condition after being taken to the shore for EMS treatment, the Coast Guard said in a post to social media. This is a developing story and will be updated. contributed to this report.

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