Saltillo (Maxico), May 7: All 13 people aboard an executive jet that went missing en route from the US city of Las Vegas to Monterrey, perished when the plane crashed near the town of Ocampo, authorities in Coahuila state said on Monday. The aircraft, a Bombardier Challenger 601, was reported missing Sunday evening, the Efe news reported. The jet took off around 5.00 p.m. (local time) on Sunday from McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas bound for the business hub of Monterrey, capital of Nuevo Leon state. Russian Plane Crash: 41 Dead After Passenger Aircraft on Fire Makes Emergency Crash-Landing at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport.

"An aerial sighting permitted us to locate the remains of the airplane in a difficult-to-access mountainous zone of the municipality of Ocampo," the state government said in a statement.

Earlier Monday, Coahuila's public safety secretary said that first responders were searching for the missing plane. "We are attending to the case because reports and alerts came from the civil aviation community," Jose Luis Pliego Corono said. "It's not about false information that suddenly appeared in social media, but an alert that emerged precisely from the civil aviation community."

Media outlets said the 10 passengers aboard the aircraft flew to Las Vegas for Saturday's boxing match pitting Mexico's Canelo Alvarez against the US fighter Daniel Jacobs. Boeing 737 With 136 Passengers On Board Falls Into River in Jacksonville, Florida After It Skids Runway.

Alvarez triumphed in the bout at T-Mobile Arena to unify three middleweight world titles. The boxer extended condolences Monday to the loved ones of the crash victims. "I lament deeply the terrible accident of the airplane coming from Vegas. I give heart-felt thanks to all the people who travel to see my fights. My prayers are with their families," Alvarez said on Twitter.

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on May 07, 2019 08:48 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).