July 4, 2024

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Twin-Engine Cessna crashes in Colorado neighborhood, no survivors found

Witnesses reported that the airplane seemed to have mechanical problems, according to fire officials. The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the Crashes cause. In the Colorado plane crash, no survivors found aboard the twin-engine Cessna that went down in a residential area in north-central Colorado on Monday. The crash ignited a fire that burned two mobile homes. Officials said the exact number of people on board the Cessna 421, which crashed near Steamboat Springs Airport just before 4:30 p.m., is unknown. The aircraft can seat up to seven people.

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Two dead in Single-Engine plane crashes in North Carolina

All residents of the mobile home park were accounted for, according to a police social media post. The fire also destroyed several outbuildings. Steamboat Springs Fire Rescue reported that the plane, believed to have taken off from Longmont, Colorado, was en route to Ogden, Utah.

Witnesses stated that the airplane seemed to have mechanical issues, according to fire officials. The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the cause of the crash. This incident follows another crash two days earlier, where a single-engine plane went down in a wooded area near Siler City, resulting in the deaths of two people on board. That crash occurred around 12:50 p.m., about a mile south-southeast of the airport.

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