The Scotsman

Five killed after plane crashes into shopping centre in Melbourne

- By MARGARET NEIGHBOUR

0 A still from a video shows the fire after a plane crashed into the Direct Factory Outlet in Essendon An Australian pilot and four American tourists on a golfing holiday have been killed after their charter plane crashed into a shopping centre in a suburbofme­lbourne,australia, shortly after take-off.

The twin-engine Beechcraft Super King Air crashed about 45 minutes before the Direct Factory Outlet in Essendon was to open, police minister Lisa Neville said.

The plane had taken off from Melbourne’s second-biggest airport at Essendon, which is next to the shopping centre, on a flight to King Island, 160 miles to the south, Ms Neville said.

The US embassy said four victims were Americans and Greg Reynolds De Haven and Russell Munsch were identified by their families on social media as two of the victims.

“The US embassy in Canberra and US consulate in Melbourne are working closely with local authoritie­s,” the embassy said.

“We stand ready to provide all appropriat­e consular assistance to the families of the victims.”

The pilot was Max Quartermai­n, owner of charter company Corporate and Leisure Travel.

Police assistant commission­er Stephen Leane said no-one on the ground was injured.

“Looking at the fireball, it is incredibly lucky that no-one was at the back of those stores or in the car park of the stores, that no one was even hurt,” he said.

The pilot reported a “catastroph­ic engine failure” moments before the plane crashed into a storage area at the rear of the shopping centre, police said.

Police and paramedics rushed to the crash site, where firefighte­rs doused the flames.

A witness who gave his name as Jason told Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n he was passing the shopping centre in a taxi when the plane crashed.

“I saw this plane coming in really low and fast. I couldn’t see the impact but when it hit the building there was a massive fireball,” he said.

“I could feel the heat through the window of the taxi, and then a wheel – it looked like a plane wheel – bounced on the road and hit the front of the taxi as we were driving along.”

Ash Mayer, a nearby store worker, said: “We felt just everything shake and a massive explosion and a fireball go up.

“We just knew there was nothing we could do.

“One of the boys actually saw it go down and he’s now left because he can’t deal with it.”

Australian Corporate Jets chief executive Bas Nikolovski said news of the accident “smashed him for six”.

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