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Three missing after deadly plane crash at Md. home Three missing after deadly plane crash at Md. home
(35 minutes later)
Three people were killed when a plane crashed into a house in Montgomery County on Monday morning, and three people on the ground are unaccounted for, authorities said.Three people were killed when a plane crashed into a house in Montgomery County on Monday morning, and three people on the ground are unaccounted for, authorities said.
The three people confirmed dead were aboard the plane. The incident occurred about a mile northwest of the Montgomery County Airpark.The three people confirmed dead were aboard the plane. The incident occurred about a mile northwest of the Montgomery County Airpark.
Pete Piringer, a spokesman for the Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Department, said “no one was transported to a hospital. They were not able to survive the crash.”Pete Piringer, a spokesman for the Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Department, said “no one was transported to a hospital. They were not able to survive the crash.”
At 2 p.m., Montgomery County Fire Chief Steven E. Lohr said at a news conference that three people were unaccounted for and that they are residents of 19733 Drop Forge Lane, a home in the cul-de-sac which the plane crashed into.At 2 p.m., Montgomery County Fire Chief Steven E. Lohr said at a news conference that three people were unaccounted for and that they are residents of 19733 Drop Forge Lane, a home in the cul-de-sac which the plane crashed into.
He later said that the three people are a mother and her two children. He said that firefighters had gone through “about 50 percent of the house” as of Monday afternoon. Two other homes were also damaged in the crash. Just before 3 p.m., Lohr said there was a still a portion of the house that they had not gotten into because of structural instability.
Two other homes were also damaged in the crash.
Lohr said officials from the National Transportation Safety Board are expected to give an update at 4 p.m. Monday.Lohr said officials from the National Transportation Safety Board are expected to give an update at 4 p.m. Monday.
The crash occurred near Snouffer School Road in Gaithersburg. Just after 11 a.m., a Montgomery fire department official said in a Twitter message that several houses were damaged and that firefighters were involved in a “search, rescue & firefight.”The crash occurred near Snouffer School Road in Gaithersburg. Just after 11 a.m., a Montgomery fire department official said in a Twitter message that several houses were damaged and that firefighters were involved in a “search, rescue & firefight.”
Lohr said the initial call came in from a National Guard armory across the street as a report of an explosion and building fir, and authorities found that it was a plane that had crashed into the houses.
(Plane crash in Gaithersburg causes road closures)(Plane crash in Gaithersburg causes road closures)
Lohr said the initial call came in from a National Guard armory across the street as a report of an explosion and building fire, and authorities found that it was a plane that had crashed into the houses. He said fire crews were on the scene within 7 minutes of getting the initial call.
Neighbors in the area said a family lived in the house, including young children who often played outside. They said the family was known to be quite friendly and hosted neighborhood get-togethers.
“I’m sad, so sad,” said Marlon Cienfuegos, who has lived in the neighborhood for about 15 years. “You don’t want this to ever happen, and this time of year — it’s terrible.”
Jim Siron, 56, who is another neighbor and lives several houses down, said two adults and three children lived in the home hit by the plane. “They are a nice family,” he said.
He said he was working in his home this morning when he heard an explosion. He heard a boom and said: “My house shook.”
Dianne Gayle, who also lives on the street, said she was working Monday morning at her home, heard a plane overhead and at first thought it wasn’t a big deal. Then, she said, she heard a boom and saw flames. She said she called 911 immediately and recalled saying to the dispatcher: “The house is on fire! The house is on fire! A plane crashed into the house! A plane crashed into the house!”
“It’s just heartbreaking, ” she added.
Authorities said the plane was preliminarily identified as a private jet owned by an aviation company based in Chapel Hill, N.C. It reportedly had turned on final approach to land at the nearby airpark, just behind a Cessna 172 propeller-driven plane.Authorities said the plane was preliminarily identified as a private jet owned by an aviation company based in Chapel Hill, N.C. It reportedly had turned on final approach to land at the nearby airpark, just behind a Cessna 172 propeller-driven plane.
The jet that crashed was a twin-engine Embraer EMB-500/Phenom 100, which can carry four to six passengers. The incident was reported about 11 a.m. The Federal Aviation Administration and the NTSB will investigate.The jet that crashed was a twin-engine Embraer EMB-500/Phenom 100, which can carry four to six passengers. The incident was reported about 11 a.m. The Federal Aviation Administration and the NTSB will investigate.
“We are sending someone out there right now,” said Eric Weiss, a spokesman for the NTSB.“We are sending someone out there right now,” said Eric Weiss, a spokesman for the NTSB.
The airpark is an uncontrolled runway, which means that, as opposed to larger airports, there is no air traffic control tower directing final approach. The airpark is an uncontrolled runway, which means that, as opposed to larger airports, there is no air traffic control tower directing final approach. The county-owned airport opened in 1959 to relieve aviation traffic into what is now known as Reagan National Airport. Since the emergence of Baltimore-Washington International Marshall Airport and Dulles International Airport, the facility in Gaithersburg has transformed into one used by small planes and business travelers.
The airport has about 100,000 annual departures and arrivals and is the fourth-busiest general aviation airport in Maryland.
There have been two aircraft accidents at the Gaithersburg airport this year. On Sept. 13, a U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Cessna nosed over after landing. The pilot and two passengers were not injured. Three weeks earlier, the pilot of a Piper plane was seriously injured when he made a forced landing after his engine failed.
Byron Valencia, 31, who lives about a half-mile from the crash site, said he heard a thump and ran upstairs to check on his 2-month-old son. Valencia said at the time that he was in his kitchen making a bottle for the baby.Byron Valencia, 31, who lives about a half-mile from the crash site, said he heard a thump and ran upstairs to check on his 2-month-old son. Valencia said at the time that he was in his kitchen making a bottle for the baby.
“I heard the plane come over the house,” he said. “This one sounded like a jet, and then I heard a thump. It was pretty loud. I didn’t see anything but then I heard the sirens.” He said he then listened to his police scanner and heard of the crash.“I heard the plane come over the house,” he said. “This one sounded like a jet, and then I heard a thump. It was pretty loud. I didn’t see anything but then I heard the sirens.” He said he then listened to his police scanner and heard of the crash.
“It’s a little nerve wracking,” he said of airplanes coming into the nearby airport in Gaithersburg. “They make you nervous because you never know when something can happen, and sure enough, something did happen.”“It’s a little nerve wracking,” he said of airplanes coming into the nearby airport in Gaithersburg. “They make you nervous because you never know when something can happen, and sure enough, something did happen.”
Tracy Everett said he was driving his work truck when he looked up and saw that the plane was “unsteady” and in trouble.Tracy Everett said he was driving his work truck when he looked up and saw that the plane was “unsteady” and in trouble.
“It was wobbly,” Everett said. “It was 100 to 200 above the trees.” He said the plane then did a rolling dive to the left, and then “I saw smoke.”“It was wobbly,” Everett said. “It was 100 to 200 above the trees.” He said the plane then did a rolling dive to the left, and then “I saw smoke.”
He said he drove to the scene and “saw and heard a secondary explosion. It was so powerful you could feel it under your feet.”He said he drove to the scene and “saw and heard a secondary explosion. It was so powerful you could feel it under your feet.”
Jocelyn Brown, 21, lives one street over from the crash site and said she heard the plane hit while inside her house.Jocelyn Brown, 21, lives one street over from the crash site and said she heard the plane hit while inside her house.
She ran over to the crash site and said the plane looked like “it just fell apart.”She ran over to the crash site and said the plane looked like “it just fell apart.”
“It’s like somebody took the screws out,” she said, the house right behind her still smoldering.“It’s like somebody took the screws out,” she said, the house right behind her still smoldering.
Staff writers Ashley Halsey III and Mike Rosenwald and researcher Alice Crites contributed to this report. Miriam Arevalo, who lives with her husband and two children a block away from the crash, said she was home waiting for her ride to work when she heard a big boom.
“I heard a big explosion. It’s like nothing I’ve ever heard before,” she said. “I immediately thought, ‘Oh my God, it is a plane.’ ”
Arevalo moved to the area eight years ago, and said residents live in fear of something like this happening.
“We hear the rumbling in the skies every day,” Arevalo said. “Planes always fly low. It could have hit any of the homes in the neighborhood.”
Staff writers Ashley Halsey III, Luz Lazo, Mike Rosenwald and Julie Zauzmer and researcher Alice Crites contributed to this report.
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Aug. 23 - Small plane crashes at Montgomery County airport; pilot seriously injuredAug. 23 - Small plane crashes at Montgomery County airport; pilot seriously injured