Investigators seek answers after Minnesota plane crash
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USA TODAY |
The SOCATA TBM7 plane crashed in Brooklyn Park around 12:20 p.m. Saturday, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The aircraft departed Des Moines International Airport and was
The New York Times |
It was not immediately known if anyone had been injured.
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Investigators sift through the wreckage of a plane that departed from Des Moines and crashed in a Minneapolis suburb.
The pilot was the sole fatality and there were no other injuries after a plane crashed through the roof of a Brooklyn Park house on Saturday, officials said in a press conference. One person inside the home was able to escape without injuries. A second resident was not home at the time, Brooklyn Park Fire Chief Shawn Conway said Sunday.
A small plane crashed into a home in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, on Saturday afternoon, killing all on board and causing a fire, officials said. It was not immediately clear how many people were on board, Brooklyn Park Fire Chief Shawn Conway said at a news conference Saturday. Officials said they are still investigating the cause of the crash.
A small plane traveling from Iowa crashed in a Minneapolis, Minnesota, suburb Saturday, investigators said. The Federal Aviation Administration said the SOCATA TBM7 crashed in a residential area in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, around 12:20 p.m. It was not immediately clear how many people were aboard the jet or if there were any survivors.
A small plane crashed in Minnesota on Saturday, engulfing a home with flames. It comes after a separate close call yesterday between a passenger plane and a fighter jet near Reagan National Airport, just two months after the deadly crash there that killed 67 people in January.
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KARE's Joe McCoy spoke with Mary Butler, who's lived in the house with her husband, Kenneth Tobacman, for around 15 years.
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It was not immediately known how many people were on board, the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement.
The FAA missed a deadline for responding to questions from Maryland’s U.S. senators, who have expressed lingering safety concerns since a midair plane crash in January.