A small plane plunged into a neighborhood near a Connecticut airport
Friday and three people were missing, including two children inside a
home that caught fire.
The crash of the propeller-driven plane
caused the partial collapse of two homes near Tweed New Haven Airport.
Firefighters found both homes engulfed in flames.
The missing
include the one person on the plane and two children in a house, ages 1
and 13, said Joseph Maturo, the mayor of East Haven.
"We haven't
recovered anybody at this point, and we presume there is going to be a
very bad outcome," East Haven Fire Chief Douglas Jackson said.
The
plane, a Rockwell International Turbo Commander 690B, flew out of
Teterboro Airport in New Jersey and crashed at 11:25 a.m. local time,
according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
Tweed's airport
manager, Lori Hoffman-Soares, said the pilot had been in communication
with air traffic control did not issue any distress calls.
"All we know is that it missed the approach and continued on," she said.
A neighbor, David Esposito, said he heard a loud noise and then a thump. "No engine noise, nothing," he said.
"A woman was screaming her kids were in there," he said.
Esposito
said he ran into the upstairs of the house, where the woman believed
her children were, but they could not find them. They returned
downstairs to search but he dragged the woman out when the flames became
too strong.
Maturo offered sympathy to the children's mother and their family.
"It's total devastation in the back of the home," he said.
___
Associated Press writer Michael Melia in Hartford, Connecticut contributed to this report.
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