Three killed in plane crash in Riverside
Two women on the plane are hurt. Two houses are destroyed by fire, but no one on the ground is injured.
A Cessna 310 carrying five people headed for San Jose crashed into two homes. No one on the ground was hurt.
Three people were killed Monday when a small plane crashed into a residential neighborhood in Riverside, destroying two houses.
All the dead were from the plane, Riverside Fire Chief Michael Moore said late Monday. Two others onboard the plane, which was on its way back to San Jose after a cheerleading event in Anaheim, were injured.
Moore initially said that four people had died, including a neighborhood resident. He later said that no one on the ground was injured or killed.
The two injured from the plane, which had five people aboard, were both women in their late 30s or early 40s, Moore said.
One was in critical condition and undergoing surgery at a burn center.
The crash was reported about 4:40 p.m. The Cessna 310, which had just taken off from Riverside Municipal Airport, crashed into two houses on Rhonda Road, near the intersection of Streeter and Central avenues.
The plane went down about half a mile northeast of the airport, said Ian Gregor, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration’s Pacific Division.
Television footage showed heavy smoke and flames coming from the houses, which quickly burned to the ground as fuel from the Cessna’s full tank caught fire.
Debris was scattered across front lawns, landing as far as a half-mile away, Moore said.
The whole block of about 20 houses was evacuated. Late Monday evening, firefighters were still trying to put out the flames. The crash will be investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board.
Firefighters initially thought that as many as five people were missing in the charred ruins. But a family from one of the destroyed houses came home, Moore said.
Residents from another home have not been in contact with authorities, but they appeared to have been away at the time of the crash.
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