Los Angeles Times

9 feared dead in Georgia crash

Puerto Rico Air National Guard plane goes down during a training mission.

- By Jenny Jarvie Jarvie is a special correspond­ent.

ATLANTA — As many as nine people were believed dead after a Puerto Rico Air National Guard plane crashed and burst into flames Wednesday on a busy highway just a few miles from a Georgia airport.

Capt. Jeff Bezore, a spokesman for the Georgia Air National Guard’s 165th Airlift Wing, said five bodies had been recovered from the Lockheed C-130 Hercules. He could not confirm how many people were on the aircraft, but Puerto Rican authoritie­s told the Associated Press that nine people were aboard.

The four-engine turboprop military transport aircraft went down about 11:30 a.m. Eastern time, just a few miles northeast of Savannah/Hilton Head Internatio­nal Airport, between Georgia Highway 21 and Crossgate Road, according to the Chatham Emergency Management Agency in Savannah.

Video captured by a business’ surveillan­ce camera appeared to show the aircraft descend and suddenly take an abrupt nosedive. A few seconds later, a tower of flames and thick, dark smoke shoot up into the blue sky.

Several hours after the plane crashed, emergency crews began recovering bodies from the wreckage, but it was still too hot to mount a full search, said William Wessinger, the coroner for Chatham County.

“I am sitting here in a chair about 200 yards from the burning embers,” Wessinger said in a telephone interview as emergency crews sprayed water and foam on the aircraft. “The Air Force can’t recover the bodies or move them out amongst the burning aluminum and charred metal. As soon as that cools down, the recovery team will go in.”

The possibilit­y of survivors, he added, was “pretty low.”

It was unclear whether anyone on the ground was affected.

“As far as we know, there were no cars hit in this crash,” Effingham County sheriff’s spokeswoma­n Gena Bilbo said during an afternoon news conference. “It is an absolute miracle at that time of day and at that intersecti­on.”

The section of highway where the aircraft crashed, she said, could be closed for weeks as agencies scour the wreckage site.

Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons of the 165th Airlift Wing said at the news briefing that an interim safety board was securing the crash scene and a mortuary team was traveling from Charleston, S.C.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to our brothers and sisters at the Puerto Rico Air National Guard,” he said. “This is never a fun time. We are here to support them.”

“We are dismayed by the airplane accident that occurred today in Georgia,” Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello said on Twitter. “Our prayers are with the families of the Puerto Rican crew.”

In a statement, the Air National Guard said the cargo plane crashed while performing a training mission. Personnel are on the scene and a board of officers will investigat­e the crash, it added.

A photo posted on Twitter by the Savannah Profession­al Firefighte­rs Assn. showed the tail end of the aircraft on a grassy median alongside a highway, engulfed in flames and obscured by plumes of black smoke.

Last year, the Air National Guard designated Savannah as the hub of operations to Puerto Rico after hurricanes Irma and Maria caused widespread damage across the U.S. territory, flattening homes and cutting off power to residents across the island.

Roger Best, who drives jockey trucks at a hazardous materials worksite about a quarter of a mile from the crash, wrote in a Facebook message that he saw the aircraft fly just above him before it crashed. The pilot, he said, managed to avert an even bigger disaster by avoiding his workplace.

“The guy is a hero,” he said of the pilot, noting that he barely made it over the tree line. “It honestly look[ed] like he was trying to avoid hitting us cuz if he did this area is a giant bomb and this whole 5 Mi radius would have blown up.”

 ?? Stephen B. Morton EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? SMOLDERING RUINS of a Lockheed C-130 Hercules plane litter a highway near Savannah, Ga. A sheriff’s official called it an “absolute miracle” that no cars on the busy roadway were struck by the aircraft. Authoritie­s are uncertain what caused the crash.
Stephen B. Morton EPA/Shuttersto­ck SMOLDERING RUINS of a Lockheed C-130 Hercules plane litter a highway near Savannah, Ga. A sheriff’s official called it an “absolute miracle” that no cars on the busy roadway were struck by the aircraft. Authoritie­s are uncertain what caused the crash.

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