Video captures small plane plunging into 2 homes; several killed
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- Three people died and two were injured when a small plane carrying them home from a cheerleading competition crashed into two Southern California homes and sparked a major fire Monday, authorities said.
Security video captured the plane plunging from the sky and erupting into a fireball, reports CBS Los Angeles.
A husband, wife and three teenagers were on the plane that had just taken off from Riverside Municipal Airport at 4:40 p.m. intending to return to San Jose after the weekend cheerleading event at Disneyland when it crashed in the residential neighborhood, Riverside Fire Chief Michael Moore said.
One of the teenagers was thrown from a back seat of the plane on impact but had only minor injuries, Moore said. Three witnesses told TV stations she crawled from the home asking for help. She was able to talk to firefighters about what had happened as she was taken to Riverside Community Hospital, Moore said.
Firefighters entered one of the burning houses and pulled out another plane passenger, who was unconscious. That victim, a woman, underwent surgery at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in San Bernardino and was in critical condition, Moore said.
Three bodies, all from the plane, were found in the combined wreckage of the aircraft and the homes.
“It’s horrible,” Moore said, especially given that they had gone to a cheer competition and it was “supposed to be a happy time.”
Authorities had earlier said four were dead, and that the critically injured victim was a resident of the homes, but later reduced the death toll to three and said all five victims had been on the plane. They have not given the ages or identities of the victims.
All the residents of the homes have been accounted for, Moore said.
Apparently, no one was home at the time of the crash, he said.
The plane was a Cessna 310, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor confirmed to CBS L.A., which added that investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board were on scene to begin to seek the cause of the crash.
Moore didn’t give the name of the cheerleading competition, but the Jr. USA Nationals for girls age 15 and under was held at Disney California Adventure Park over the weekend.
The two homes that were hit directly were destroyed, and there was minor damage to some neighboring houses, Moore said.
The plane was broken into hundreds of pieces, its propeller sitting on the roof of a nearby home, and the fire burning with jet fuel was still ablaze several hours after the crash. Firefighters found plane pieces about a half-mile away.
“I saw somebody crawling out of the house, on the ground, on fire,” neighbor Traci Zamora told CBA L.A., “and I started screaming, ‘Put her out, put her out.”’
Neighbor Ernesto Torres heard the explosion and ran with other Good Samaritans to the site to help.
“We ran up to the house, it was on fire,” Torres said to CBS L.A. “There was a lady, she was on fire. We helped pull her out of the flames.”
H.L. Reyes, who lives about a quarter-mile from the crash site, told The Associated Press she felt the ground shake and saw plumes of black smoke.
“I thought it was a possible earthquake, and we heard all the birds just suddenly react outside, too,” Reyes said. “This was just like a nightmare coming true.”