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The official, Mike Whitaker, said the FAA would not agree to any Boeing request to expand production of Max planes until the agency is satisfied that quality-control concerns have been addressed. The move came on the same day that a key senator indicated that Congress will join the scrutiny of Boeing. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the accident on an Alaska Airlines Max 9. Investigators are building a timeline of the door plug that failed, from the early stages of its production to the flight on which it blew off the plane. The Federal Aviation Administration is looking into whether Boeing and its suppliers followed proper safety procedures during manufacturing.
Persons: Mike Whitaker, Max, Sen, Maria Cantwell, David Calhoun, jetliner, Cantwell, Calhoun, Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Boeing, Max, Federal Aviation Administration, Alaska Airlines Boeing, FAA, Senate Commerce, Science, Transportation Committee, National Transportation Safety, Alaska Airlines Max, NTSB Locations: Oregon, Portland , Oregon, Renton , Washington
New York CNN —Boeing CEO David Calhoun’s Wednesday was decidedly a mixed bag: The Federal Aviation Administration finally approved a set of inspection criteria for the 171 grounded 737 Max 9 planes that, if followed, could return the aircraft to service. And the FAA said it would not grant any production expansion of the 737 Max lineup while its safety probe of Boeing continues. “We fly safe planes,” Calhoun said to reporters assembled on Capitol Hill. A week earlier, Calhoun acknowledged the company made a “mistake” at a staff-wide safety meeting, but he did not specify what that mistake was. Two Max variants — the Max 7 and the Max 10 — are still awaiting approval to begin carrying passengers.
Persons: David Calhoun’s, Max, Mike Whitaker, United, Whitaker, , , Mr, Calhoun, ” Calhoun, Washington Democratic Sen, Maria Cantwell, ” Cantwell, Jennifer Homendy, , Wells Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Alaska Airlines, Airlines, Washington Calhoun’s, Washington, Capitol, Washington Democratic, Senate, National Transportation Safety Locations: New York, Alaska, United, Washington, Wells, Indonesia, Ethiopia
On Thursday, factory workers will pause production for sessions on improving quality control. The FAA's boss said its investigation focuses on Boeing's quality control, not the door plug design. Nobody was seriously injured, but all 171 Boeing 737 Max 9 jets with a door plug have been grounded since. AdvertisementNEW: FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker tells me its probe of the Alaska Airlines blowout is focused on Boeing quality control issues. The 737 Max 9 door plug design is good "when properly executed," but "where we are looking now is quality assurance and quality control at Boeing."
Persons: , Stan Deal, CNN's Pete Muntean, Mike Whitaker, Max, Pete Muntean, Ben Minicucci, United's Scott Kirby Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Service, Boeing Commercial Airplanes, Navy, Max, National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, NBC Locations: Renton , Washington
Alaska Airlines N704AL, a 737 Max 9, which made an emergency landing at Portland International Airport on January 5 is parked at a maintenance hanger in Portland, Oregon on January 23, 2024. Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun met with several U.S. senators Wednesday on Capitol Hill as scrutiny on the company's leaders intensifies over a blown door plug on one of the company's 737 Max 9 planes. "I'm here today in the spirit of transparency ... [and to] answer all their questions, because they have a lot of them," Calhoun told reporters. Earlier Wednesday The Seattle Times reported that the fuselage panel that blew out during the Alaska Airlines flight, manufactured by Spirit AeroSystems , was removed for repair and then improperly reinstalled by Boeing's mechanics, not Spirit's. The stock is down more than 10% since the Jan. 5 Alaska Airlines incident.
Persons: Dave Calhoun, Calhoun, It's, Mike Whitaker, Sen, Dan Sullivan, Sullivan, Spirit AeroSystems, AeroSystems Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, Boeing, Capitol, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, CNBC, Republican, Aviation, The Seattle Times, Spirit, U.S . National Transportation, Seattle Times, NTSB Locations: Portland , Oregon, Alaska, Calhoun
"Until we're comfortable that the [quality assurance] system is working properly ... we're going to have boots on the ground," he said. United, which has 79 Boeing 737 Max 9 planes in its fleet, more than any other carrier, said Monday it's assuming the planes will remain grounded through the end of January. He said United is taking the larger variant, the 737 Max 10, out of its fleet plans, because of lengthy delivery delays. Those accidents involved the 737 Max 8, a smaller variant of the same aircraft family. This photo released by the National Transportation Safety Board shows the door plug from Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 on Monday, Jan. 8, 2024, in Portland, Ore. National Transportation Safety Board via AP
Persons: Michael Whitaker, Drew Angerer, , Mike Whitaker, Max, We've, Whitaker, It's, John Lovell, they've, Scott Kirby, Ben Minicucci, Stan Deal Organizations: Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Commerce, Science, Capitol, Getty, Getty Images WASHINGTON, CNBC, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, United Airlines, National Transportation Safety Board, National Transportation, AP, Max, Airlines, NBC, Deal, Transportation Locations: Washington ,, Alaska, Portland , Oregon, Renton , Washington, Portland , Ore
How Did a Boeing Jet End Up With a Big Hole? At about 16,000 feet, pilots heard a loud boom, and the pressure dropped further: One of those door plugs had completely torn off. National Transportation Safety BoardBoeing’s chief executive, Dave Calhoun, has suggested that a manufacturing lapse was responsible for the door plug blowing out. investigation, it’s clear to us we received an airplane from the manufacturer with a faulty door plug,” Alaska said in a statement. An older Boeing model, the 737-900ER, has the same design for its door plugs as the Max 9.
Persons: Bolts, New York Times Bolts, Jeff Simon, cotter, Simon, , it’s, ” Gary Peterson, Dave Calhoun, AeroSystems, Max, fuselages, Joe Buccino, Mr, Buccino, Mathieu Lewis, Rolland Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, New York Times, The New York Times, National Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, Transport Workers Union of America, Transportation Safety, Alaska Airline, Transportation, CNBC, Spirit, Board, Portland International Airport Locations: Alaska, Portland ,, Malaysia, Wichita, Kan, Renton, Wash, Jan
The flight was canceled "to provide time for precautionary additional engineering maintenance checks," a Virgin Atlantic representative told Business Insider in a statement. AdvertisementThe missing bolts were not a safety concern, experts sayA Virgin Atlantic Airbus A330 flies over London in December 2022. "We'd like to apologize to our customers for the delay to their journeys," Virgin Atlantic told BI in a statement, and confirmed the plane is now back in service following an inspection. While not a safety issue, the recent Virgin Atlantic flight cancellation is not the first problem the airline has faced this year. On January 7, a Virgin Atlantic Airbus A330 traveling from Manchester to Barbados made an emergency landing after the smell of smoke filled the cockpit, The Independent reported.
Persons: , Phil Hardy, John F, Hardy, Robert Smith, Neil Firth, Mathieu Lewis, Rolland, Getty Organizations: Service, Kennedy, Virgin Atlantic, New York Post, Business, Airbus, Kennedy News Agency, The Independent, Virgin Atlantic Airbus, Getty, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Alaska Airlines Boeing, Max, National Transportation Safety Board, An Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, US Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Independent Locations: Manchester, England, New York City, NYC, London, Portland , Oregon, Ontario , California, Barbados
Read previewA safety inspection of Alaska Airline's Boeing 737 Max 9 planes revealed "many" loose bolts were found on the commercial airline's fleet. "I'm more than frustrated and angry that this happened to Alaska Airlines," Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci told Business Insider in a statement. The Alaska CEO's statements come after inspections of the Boeing 737 Max 9 planes following the January 6 incident. United Airlines also previously announced that it had found loose bolts that appear to "relate to installation issues in the door plug." Earlier this month, the agency told reporters that the door plug fitted into the Alaska Airlines plane involved in the incident was found "fractured."
Persons: , Ben Minicucci, Scott Kirby, Max 10s Organizations: Service, Alaska Airline's Boeing, Max, Business, Alaska Airlines, Boeing, NBC News, United Airlines, National Transportation Safety Board, FAA, Forbes, CNBC Locations: Alaska, Portland, Ontario , California
"SNL" aired a parody ad for Alaska Airlines in its first show of the year, hosted by Jacob Elordi. Although the FAA has been more critical of Boeing's role in the blowout than Alaska Airlines. Advertisement"Saturday Night Live" aired a sketch this past weekend that parodied Alaska Airlines following the Flight 1282 incident where a Boeing 737 Max 9 lost its door plug in midair. AdvertisementThe door plug that came off the 737 Max 9 on January 5 covered a deactivated emergency exit which is only operational in configurations with more passengers. When the National Transportation Safety Board recovered the door plug in Oregon, they learned four bolts attaching it to the jet were missing.
Persons: Jacob Elordi, Captain Sully, , Nobody, Chesley, Sully, Sullenberger, Kenan Thompson, We're, Elordi, AeroSystems, Dave Calhoun Organizations: Alaska Airlines, FAA, Service, Boeing, Max, Portland International, National Transportation Safety Board, United Airlines, CNBC Locations: Alaska, Oregon
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Aviation Administration recommends that airlines inspect the door plugs on certain Boeing 737s that are older than the Max 9 jetliner that suffered a blowout of a similar panel during a flight this month. The FAA said that 737-900ERs have logged 3.9 million flights without any known issues involving the door plugs. Political Cartoons View All 253 ImagesOne of the two door plugs on an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9 flew off the plane in midflight on Jan. 5. The FAA has grounded all Max 9s with door plugs instead of regular doors in the back of the cabin. Boeing delivered about 500 737-900ERs between 2007 and 2019 – mostly to U.S. airlines -- and about 380 have door plugs instead of exits.
Persons: jetliner, Max Organizations: WASHINGTON, Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing, FAA, Alaska Airlines Boeing, Max, United Airlines, National Transportation Safety Locations: midflight, Oregon, Alaska, United, U.S
WEATHERFORD, Okla. (AP) — Three members of an air ambulance crew were killed when their helicopter crashed late Saturday in Oklahoma, officials said. The crash was reported near Weatherford after the control center lost contact with the Air Evac Lifeteam helicopter crew shortly before 11:30 p.m., the company said in a statement Sunday. The crew was returning to base in Weatherford, 70 miles (113 kilometers) west of Oklahoma City, after completing a patient care transport to the capital, the statement said. Nearby Air Evac teams assisted law enforcement with the search for the crew members. The company did not say where the Bell 206L3 was found and did not immediately release the victims' names.
Persons: WEATHERFORD, Bell Organizations: Air, Oklahoma City, National Transportation Locations: Okla, Oklahoma, Weatherford
A homebuilt aircraft crashed into the ocean just south of San Francisco on Sunday. AdvertisementA small homebuilt aircraft crashed off the coast of California on Sunday, The Associated Press reported. But the following morning, authorities said a fishing boat spotted a "deceased female" in the water, which they said was "likely associated with the plane crash given she was located in the same location." The Cozy Mark IV is 16.9 feet long with a wing span of 28.1 feet. It has a top speed of 200 mph and can travel around 1,000 miles, per Aircraft Spruce & Specialty Co., which sells plans for the Mark IV.
Persons: , Mark IV, Emma Willmer, Lochie Ferrier, Cassidy Petit, Thane Ostroth, Ostroth, Marc Zeitlin, Zeitlin, Mark Organizations: Sunday, Service, Associated Press, Federal, Facebook, San, San Mateo County Sheriff's, Coast Guard, CHP, Aeronautical, National Transportation Safety Board, Cozy, AP, NTSB, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Specialty Co Locations: San Francisco, California, San Mateo County, Moss Beach , CA, Australian, United States
The plane was registered to an Oakland-based company called Winged Wallabies, Inc., according to Federal Aviation Administration records. He said it was “traumatic” to know the plane he had spent so much time on had crashed with people on board. Like commercial aircraft, all home-built planes are required by the FAA to be inspected annually for air worthiness. Cozy aircraft have the same safety record as commercially built planes of similar size, said aeronautical engineer Marc Zeitlin, who consults with the National Transportation Safety Board on crash investigations involving Cozy aircraft, including this one. “You buy foam, you buy fiberglass, you buy metal parts from all the manufacturers.
Persons: Mark IV, Thane Ostroth, Ostroth, , I’ll, ” Ostroth, Marc Zeitlin, Zeitlin, , Zeitlen, Emma Willmer, John Antczak Organizations: ANGELES, Wallabies, Inc, Federal Aviation Administration, Authorities, Cozy, FAA, National Transportation Safety Board, Burnside Aerospace, San, San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office, U.S . Coast Guard, San Mateo County Coroner’s, The National Transportation Safety Board, Associated Press Locations: California, San Francisco, Oakland, Thane, Australia, Michigan, Florida, Ross, San Mateo County, U.S, Los Angeles
New York CNN —It’s been a tough month for shares of airline companies. Here’s why investors are getting out of airline stocks. Boeing’s “can of worms”: Boeing’s problems began on Jan. 5, when the door plug on an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9 detached mid-flight. Oil prices are volatile: Investors are also concerned about a possible spike in oil prices. United Airlines Holdings shares have declined 8% so far in January and American Airlines Group shares have fallen 6%.
Persons: New York CNN — It’s, Wells, , Max, JetBlue’s, Patrick T, Fallon, Brent, Ed Bastian, Antony Blinken, CNN’s Jennifer Hansler, Bryan Mena, Read Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, NYSE, Alaska Airlines Boeing, Max, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, US Federal Aviation Administration, National Transportation Safety, FAA, , Spirit Airlines, JetBlue, Spirit, CNN . Spirit Airlines Airbus, JetBlue Airlines Airbus, Los Angeles International Airport, Getty, US Justice Department, Hawaiian Airlines, Hawaiian Holdings, US, . West Texas, Delta Air Lines, Delta, United Airlines Holdings, American Airlines Group, Blinken’s Boeing, Commerce Department Locations: New York, Washington, Boston, AFP, Iran, Yemen, Davos, Zurich, deplane
Spirit is a Kansas-based company that builds the fuselages and other parts of Boeing planes, including the 737 Max 9. Spirit built the door plug which came off the 737 Max 9 on January 5, leaving a gaping hole in the fuselage. The National Transportation Safety Board is testing the recovered door plug to determine whether four missing bolts were ever installed. AdvertisementAlaska Airlines and United Airlines, the two biggest operators of the 737 Max 9, also found loose hardware on some of the grounded aircraft. 171 Boeing 737 Max 9 jets have been grounded by the FAA.
Persons: , Dave Calhoun, AeroSystems, Calhoun Organizations: Service, Federal Aviation Administration, Business, Boeing, Spirit, FAA, Alaska Airlines, Portland International, National Transportation Safety Board, United Airlines, Max Locations: Kansas
The panel that blew out of an Alaska Airlines jetliner this month was manufactured in Malaysia by Boeing’s leading supplier, the head of the agency investigating the incident said Wednesday. The officials indicated that their separate investigations of Boeing and the accident are in the early stages. Boeing said CEO David Calhoun visited the Wichita factory of Spirit AeroSystems, which makes a large part of the fuselage on Boeing Max jets and installs the part that came off an Alaska Airlines jetliner. An Alaska Airlines Max 9 was forced to make an emergency landing on Jan. 5 after a panel called a door plug blew out of the side of the plane shortly after takeoff from Portland, Oregon. The NTSB is investigating the accident, while the FAA investigates whether Boeing and its suppliers followed quality-control procedures.
Persons: Jennifer Homendy, Spirit AeroSystems, AeroSystems, , Mike Whitaker, , Sen, Jerry Moran, Moran, Whitaker, ” Moran, David Calhoun, Patrick Shanahan —, Donald Trump, , “ We’re, ” Calhoun, Max Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Boeing’s, National Transportation Safety, Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing, Max, Senate, Kansas Republican, FAA, Boeing Max, Pentagon, Alaska Airlines Max, NTSB, United Airlines, Dow Jones Locations: Malaysia, Washington, Wichita , Kansas, Kansas, Wichita, Calhoun, Portland , Oregon, Alaska, United, Arlington , Virginia
Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary said the airline has complained to Boeing about quality-control problems. But O'Leary also said he had the "utmost confidence'" in Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun. AdvertisementHe added that during the 48-hour checks carried out on the planes when delivered to Ryanair, a wrench was discovered under the floor of one aircraft. Despite these problems, O'Leary backed Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun, saying he has "utmost confidence" in him and the chief financial officer, per The Independent. AdvertisementThe BBC reported that Boeing asked Ryanair to send extra engineers to its factory to oversee quality checks.
Persons: Michael O'Leary, O'Leary, Dave Calhoun, , hasn't, Max Organizations: Boeing, Service, Ryanair, Alaska Airlines, United Airlines, National Transportation Safety, BBC
The Wells Fargo report, entitled “FAA audit opens up a whole new can of worms,” noted that Boeing’s quality control and engineering problems have been ongoing for years. After part of an Alaska Airlines] 737 Max 9 jet fell off the plane mid-flight, the likelihood of the US Federal Aviation Administration coming out of its investigation without significant findings was very low. The FAA last week opened an investigation into Boeing’s quality control after the Alaska Airlines incident. He also said Boeing is now more closely monitoring the work of a key supplier that builds the 737 Max fuselage. Wells Fargo analysts noted in their report that the FAA investigation could take some time to complete, noting many of its probes remain “under investigation” months after the original incidents.
Persons: Wells, , Max, Boeing “, Kirkland H, Donald “, Donald, David Calhoun, Stan Deal, Deal, Mike Whitaker, Calhoun, Jennifer Homendy, United Airlines —, , Pete Muntean, Chris Isidore, Ramishah Maruf Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, Wall, FAA, Alaska Airlines, US Federal Aviation Administration, NTSB, US, CNN, National Transportation, United Airlines Locations: New York, Portland , Oregon, Alaska, United, Indonesia, Ethiopia
NEW YORK (AP) — Boeing told employees Monday that it plans to increase quality inspections of its 737 Max 9 aircraft, following the failure of an emergency exit door panel on an Alaska Airlines flight last week. The inspections come after Federal regulators grounded the 737 Max, and that Boeing has said that after the Alaska Airlines flight and customer complaints, it is “clear that we are not where we need to be” on quality assurance and controls. The National Transportation Safety Board is focusing its investigation on plugs used to fill spots for extra doors when those exits are not required for safety reasons on Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliners. Since then, various manufacturing flaws have at times held up deliveries of Max jets and a larger Boeing plane, the 787. Last month, the company asked airlines to inspect their Max jets for a loose bolt in the rudder-control system.
Persons: , , Stan Deal, jetliners, Max Organizations: — Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Boeing, American, Airbus, Airplanes, Deal, Alaska Max, Federal Aviation Administration, National Transportation Safety, Max Locations: Alaska, Portland , Oregon, Portland, Indonesia, Ethiopia
Four Dead in Arizona Hot Air Balloon Crash
  + stars: | 2024-01-15 | by ( Jan. | At P.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +2 min
By Daniel Trotta(Reuters) - Four people including the pilot died and another person was critically injured when their hot air balloon crashed into the Arizona desert on Sunday after eight skydivers had successfully jumped out of the basket, investigators said. "The balloon impacted desert terrain following an unspecified problem with its envelope," the NTSB said, referring to the outer bag of the balloon. "It is important to clarify that the skydiving was intentional and was successfully completed by all skydivers before any issues with the hot air balloon were evident," the Eloy Police Department said in a statement. Survivor Valerie Stutterheim, 23, of Scottsdale, Arizona, was in critical condition, police said. The company operating the flight, Droplyne Hot Air Balloon Rides, had a perfect safety record, according to its website.
Persons: Daniel Trotta, skydivers, Wiescholek, Kaitlynn Bartrom, Atahan Kiliccote, Cornelius Van Der Walt, Valerie Stutterheim, Droplyne, Eloy, Michael Perry Organizations: U.S . National Transportation Safety, NTSB, Eloy Police Department, Police, South, Company Locations: Arizona, Eloy, Phoenix, Washington, Union City , Michigan, Andrews , Indiana, Cupertino , California, South African, Scottsdale , Arizona, Moab , Utah, Carlsbad , California
The crack was discovered about 40 minutes after take-off in the “second window from the right out of six windows in the cockpit,” ANA said. All 65 passengers and crew of the ANA flight 1182 arrived back safely, it added. The crack was discovered in the outermost of four layers of tempered glass on the cockpit window, the airline said. On January 5, a door plug on an Alaska Airlines flight blew open mid-flight, leaving a refrigerator-sized hole in the fuselage. The FAA said last week it was opening an investigation into Boeing’s quality control due to the failure of the door plug.
Persons: Boeing Max Organizations: Tokyo CNN, All Nippon Airways, ANA, Boeing, Japan’s Ministry of Land, Transport, Tourism, Alaska Airlines, Alaska Air, United Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, National Transportation Safety Locations: Infrastructure, Oregon, United States
CNN —Boeing says it will give airlines more oversight of its facilities following the Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 incident in which a part of the plane fell off mid-flight. The plane maker said Monday that in addition to extra quality control inspections on the 737 production line, it will allow airlines into Boeing factories and those of contractor Spirit AeroSystems, which builds Max 9 fuselage. Alaska Airlines said it is in the middle a “thorough review of Boeing’s production quality and control systems.” The airline has 65 Boeing 737 Max 9s with another 25 on order, according to fleet data from airlines analytics firm Cirium. Boeing 737 Max 9s remain grounded in the United States as airlines Alaska and United await emergency inspection guidance from the Federal Aviation Administration. On Friday, the FAA announced it will audit Boeing’s production practices as it considers mandating an independent third-party oversee Boeing quality.
Persons: Spirit, Stan Deal, , , Max Organizations: CNN, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing Commercial, Alaska, Max, FAA, National Transportation Safety Locations: Alaska, United States, United, Washington, DC
CNN —A loud bang, a jolt, and cold air whooshing suddenly through the cabin: these were the immediate signs that something was very wrong aboard Alaska Airlines flight 1282, according to one passenger report. As investigators work to determine exactly what caused the incident, we look at what happens when an aircraft experiences a sudden loss of cabin pressure and the risks for those on board. “As the aircraft climbs, the cabin pressure will eventually settle to about 8,000 feet. The flight crew will immediately start working to get the aircraft down to about 10,000 feet, where the air will be breathable. There will also be a massive wind blast as all that pressure in the cabin goes out the hole.
Persons: , Graham Braithwaite, Braithwaite, ” Braithwaite, there’s, , Jonathan Clark, that’s, David Gradwell, Clark, Sara Nelson, Patrick Smith, would’ve, wasn’t, ” Smith, it’s, we’ve Organizations: CNN, Alaska Airlines, Cranfield University, , Boeing, Japan Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Baylor College of Medicine, King’s College London, Helios Airways, US Air Force, Cessna Citation, Association of Flight, National Transportation Locations: Tokyo, Greece, Washington, Virginia, Alaska
BOSTON (AP) — A small plane carrying three people crashed in a remote, wooded area of Massachusetts on Sunday morning, authorities said. Police reported multiple fatalities. The twin-engine Beechcraft Baron 55 crashed near Leyden, Massachusetts, with three people on board, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Political Cartoons View All 253 ImagesPolice, fire and medical crews remained on the scene, DeAngelis said, while detectives and crime scene personnel were also at the crash site. The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board said they were also investigating the crash.
Persons: James D, DeAngelis, ” DeAngelis Organizations: BOSTON, Police, Federal Aviation Administration, Massachusetts State Police Trooper, Leyden Wildlife Management, FAA, National Transportation Safety Locations: Massachusetts, Leyden , Massachusetts, Greenfield
CNN —A hot air balloon crash-landed in the southern Arizona desert Sunday, leaving four people dead and another person critically injured, police announced. The “devastating incident” happened around 7:50 a.m. in Eloy, a city about 65 miles south of Phoenix, the local police department said in a news release. It came down in a desert area east of Sunshine Boulevard and Hanna Road. The aircraft was an A-160 passenger balloon manufactured by Cameron Balloons, according to the NTSB. The Eloy Police Department said it is working with the NTSB and the Federal Aviation Administration on the investigation.
Persons: , Cameron Balloons, Cameron Organizations: CNN, National Transportation Safety Board, Eloy Police, NTSB, Eloy Police Department, Federal Aviation Administration Locations: Arizona, Eloy, Phoenix, Sunshine, Hanna
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