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10 dead after small plane crashes into Texas hangar

Damage is seen to a hangar after a twin engine plane crashed into the building at Addison Airport in Addison, Texas on Sunday, June 30, 2019. All 10 people aboard a small plane died Sunday morning when it crashed into a hangar on takeoff at Addison Airport, authorities say. The twin-engine Beechcraft BE-350 King Air was destroyed by flames after it crashed at 9:10 a.m., Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Lynn Lunsford said. (Shaban Athuman/Dallas Morning News/TNS)

All 10 people aboard a small plane died Sunday morning when it crashed into a hangar on takeoff at Addison Airport, authorities say.

Two crew members and eight passengers were on board the twin-engine Beechcraft Super King Air 350 that was destroyed by flames after it crashed at 9:11 a.m., said Bruce Landsberg, vice chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.

“We don’t know a lot about the people on board,” he said.

The flight had been headed to St. Petersburg, Fla. A Falcon jet and a helicopter that were inside the hangar were damaged, Landsberg said. Addison is about 10 miles north of Dallas.

Addison spokeswoman Mary Rosenbleeth confirmed there were no survivors on the plane. The hangar was not occupied at the time of the crash.

The names of the people who died were not released while officials worked to notify their families, she said.

Addison fire spokesman Edward Martelle said the plane had just lifted off the runway when it veered left, dropped its left wing and went into the hangar.

The fire department had extinguished the fire and all hot spots at the hangar by 2 p.m.

The NTSB is leading the investigation into the crash. Officials offered no details about the cause and did not confirm whether engine failure was to blame.

“We cannot confirm that there was engine failure at this point,” Landsberg said. “There are any number of possibilities that could occur and we’re not in a position to speculate on those kinds of things.”

Jennifer Rodi, the NTSB’s lead investigator in the crash, said her team had walked through the scene several times to observe the wreckage.

The team will gather information on the flight crew on board — their training and knowledge — as well as details about how the plane was maintained and weather and communication factors that could have played into the crash.

The Federal Aviation Administration also sent investigators to the scene Sunday, FAA spokesman Lynn Lunsford said.

Martelle, the fire department spokesman, identified the plane’s registration number as N534FF. But he said authorities hadn’t confirmed who owned the plane and were looking into whether it recently had been sold.

A Chicago-area charter company had listed a King Air 350I with that registration number as part of its fleet, offering it as a nine-seat rental starting at $1,800 an hour. However, the aircraft was no longer available on the company’s website.

A search of the FAA registry did not turn up results for N534FF, but the plane’s serial number is also tied to another registration, which the FAA links to an Addison company.

The airport was closed for about 45 minutes after the crash before operations resumed.

Dallas County is helping the city of Addison set up a family assistance center for people affected by the crash, Judge Clay Jenkins said.

“It’s a very sad day for Dallas County,” he said. “My prayers are with the families we’re notifying about this tragedy.”

The mayor of St. Petersburg, Rick Kriseman, also expressed his condolences.

“We are waiting on local officials in … (Texas) to release victim info,” he wrote on Facebook. “My thoughts are with the families of the deceased.”

David Snell, who said he was getting ready to fly from the airport, told KDFW-TV (Channel 4) he’d watched as the plane took off with what appeared to be reduced power.

“The plane started to veer to the left, and you could tell it couldn’t climb,” he said, adding that he could tell the plane was going to crash.

“That was really a horrific thing to see because somebody’s life, lives, family’s lives were forever changed. It’s awful,” Snell said.

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(Staff writers María Méndez and Sara Coello contributed to this report.)

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© 2019 The Dallas Morning News

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.