US Plane Crash: Three Killed As Small Aircraft Crashes Into Florida Mobile Home (Watch Videos)

The last of the guests had lingered to finish her drink, and was in the home along with her host when it went up in flames, their neighbour Rick Renner told The Associated Press.

Screenshot of the video (Photo Credit- X/@bnonews)

Clearwater, February 2: About 10 people had enjoyed a day of golf and were having drinks inside a woman's mobile home moments before a small plane crashed and obliterated the property, an eyewitness said on Friday. The pilot and two people on the ground were killed, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

The last of the guests had lingered to finish her drink, and was in the home along with her host when it went up in flames, their neighbour Rick Renner told The Associated Press. The pilot of the single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza V35 had reported engine failure shortly before crashing into the Bayside Waters mobile home park around 7 p.m. on Thursday, the FAA said. US Plane Crashes into Mobile Home Park in Florida Setting Several Homes Ablaze, Firefighters on Scene (Watch Videos).

Small Plane Crashes Into Florida Mobile Home

Firefighters couldn't immediately tell how many people were inside the double-wide mobile home. But Renner said he jumped in his golf cart and reached the crash site shortly before emergency crews arrived. He spoke with a neighbour across the street who had just left the party, and checked to make sure other neighbours weren't in danger.

“It was just one big ball of flames,” Renner said. “You couldn't even tell there was a mobile home there.” Clearwater Fire Chief Scott Ehlers told a late night news conference that the plane's wreckage ended up inside the mobile home, which was reduced to ashes in the blaze. The pilot reported an emergency to St. Pete–Clearwater International Airport shortly before the plane went off radar, about 3 miles (5 kilometers) north of a runway, Ehlers said. The airport is about 7 miles (11 kilometers) southeast of Clearwater.

An investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board arrived in Clearwater on Friday morning to document the scene and examine the aircraft, the agency said told The Associated Press. The investigation will involve three primary areas — the pilot, the aircraft and the operating environment — and consider the flight track data, recordings of any air traffic control communications, the weather forecast and conditions at the time of the crash, witness statements and any surveillance video. US Military Aircraft Crash: F-16 Fighter Jet Crashes in South Korea, Pilot Rescued.

Renner had been watching television with some friends when they heard the loud boom. “The house actually shook, and the windows rattled,” Renner said. Renner said the gathering's host was a “snowbird” who spent her winters in the mobile home park for years. “Everybody is shocked,” he said.

Joe Miller, 72, lived next door. He said he was drifting off to sleep when he heard an “unbelievable roar” and was thrown to the floor covered in insulation and broken glass. Wrapped in a blanket and still shaking hours later, he told the Tampa Bay Times he scrambled through the wreckage of his mobile home, which was ripped apart by the explosion, and was greeted outside by leaping flames from the home next door.

Mary Fagan, 63, who lives down the street, told the Times that her mother used to own the double-wide. She said another family member who lives in Illinois now owns the home, and neighbors called her Thursday evening, saying "Your mom's mobile is on fire.” She said she rushed to the scene, and joined other neighbors as they watched firefighters douse the flames.

After eight years in the mobile home, in a large 55-plus community off US 19, Miller told the newspaper he has no idea what he'll do now. “The roof's blown off and I don't know what's left inside. I just know I'm lucky to be here,” he said.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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