The pilot of a plane that
crashed into an Australian shopping center called "mayday" several times
before the crash on Tuesday, authorities said.
The
pilot did not specify the nature of the emergency before the
twin-engine Beechcraft crashed near Melbourne, killing four American
tourists, the Australian Transport Safety Bureau said in a press
conference Wednesday morning local time.
Portions
of the aircraft are still on the roof of the shopping center and in the
parking lot, ATSB officials said. Investigators have completed of sweet
of the runway for plane parts. Officials are also interviewing people
who were on the runway at the time of the ill-dated takeoff, including
pilots who also fly the Beechcraft and may have some helpful
observations as to what they dash.
The crash was also documented on dashcam video, which investigators are looking into for clues.
Pilot pesawat yang jatuh di dekat Melbourne |
"Dear
friends and family, my handsome athletic big brother was killed today
in a plane accident while on his 'once in a lifetime' trip to Australia.
It was a charter flight with 2 of his friends flying to another island
to play golf," Denelle Wicht, the sister of Greg Reynolds De Haven, wrote on Facebook.
Wicht
told ABC News that her brother was traveling in a group, and that the
husbands had split up with their wives for the day. She said that the
group had been traveling for two weeks before the accident took place.
"Greg
was on a vacation trip with a group of friends and wives. They were to
spend three weeks in Australia, and I think they were there for two
weeks plus when this happened. The group was spending the day going
separate ways, there are other wives who lost their husbands. So so sad.
Such a great guy," Wicht said in a Facebook message.
The plane had taken off from Essendon Airport around 9 a.m.
local time and suffered a "catastrophic engine failure" in the air,
according to Victoria Police assistant commissioner Stephen Leane.
The
pilot attempted to return to the airport and crashed into the DFO
shopping center, Leane said. There were no fatalities on the ground, he
added.
The pilot of the plane was Max Quartermain,
who owned the charter company Corporate and Leisure Travel, according to
The Associated Press.
A State Department
official confirmed that four U.S. citizens were aboard the flight. “We
extend our deepest condolences to the families and loved ones of all
those who died in today’s tragic crash," the official said.
Victoria's premier, Daniel Andrews, called the incident the “worst civil aviation accident in our state” in 30 years.
The identities of those who died and the nationality of the fifth victim were not immediately known.
“We
extend our deepest condolences to the families and loved ones of those
who died in today’s tragic crash," a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in
Canberra said.
ABC News' Tom Liddy, Benjamin Gittleson, Kirit Radia, Joseph Simonetti, and Matthew Stone contributed to this report.
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