Hartford Courant

Plane crash kills four

Corporate jet hit building en route to North Carolina

- By Jesse Leavenwort­h, Christine Dempsey and Jessika Harkay

Four people who were aboard a corporate jet that crashed into a Farmington business Thursday morning have died, officials said. The crash, at 111 Hyde Road, destroyed the plane and sent workers running.

“First responders were here almost immediatel­y, but there was nothing left,” said Gov. Ned Lamont at the scene.

The crash of the Cessna Citation 560XL happened around 9:50 a.m. at Trumpf Inc., a manufactur­er near the town line and Robertson Airport in Plainville. It had just taken off from Robertson and was headed to the Dare County Regional Airport in Manteo, North Carolina, said Brittany Trotter, spokeswoma­n with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

Officials confirmed Thursday afternoon that two pilots and two passengers were killed in the crash. Workers inside the building reportedly sustained only minor injuries. Members of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board arrived to investigat­e the crash with help from the FAA.

The corporate jet appeared to be in trouble soon after takeoff, Farmington police said.

It hit the ground near 111 Hyde Road and then slammed into the side of the building.

It appears there was some type of mechanical failure during the takeoff sequence that resulted in the crash, officials said.

“It is miraculous ... that we can confirm that nobody was injured inside [the building, which] is the silver lining to this tragedy,” said Farmington Police Lt. Timothy Mckenzie.

People who work in the area reported hearing a loud thump. The lights flickered, and they lost power.

The plane and side of the Trumpf building were engulfed in flames and burned about 20-30 minutes.

The jet destroyed a corner of the building, which was still smoldering at 11:30; the plane had been filled with jet fuel.

A witness said the plane took out a utility pole and its transforme­r before it struck the building.

After the crash, parts of the aircraft were strewn across the grass. There were no signs of survivors from inside the plane.

“The fire personnel were amazing today and showed up as fast as they could to try to put out this fire,” Mckenzie said.

But responding to tragedies is always difficult, he said, expressing solidarity with Connecticu­t State Troopers after a trooper from Troop L was swept away by flood waters in Woodbury early Thursday.

“I know the Farmington PD is with a heavy heart today thinking of our brothers in blue and the Connecticu­t State Police as well,” Mckenzie said.

“This accident here weighs on the first responders.”

 ?? PHOTOS/HARTFORD COURANT MARK MIRKO ?? A plane crashed into 111 Hyde Road in Farmington on Thursday, killing four people.
PHOTOS/HARTFORD COURANT MARK MIRKO A plane crashed into 111 Hyde Road in Farmington on Thursday, killing four people.
 ??  ?? The plane hit and damaged a commercial building in Farmington.
The plane hit and damaged a commercial building in Farmington.

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