Los Angeles Times

Small-plane crash kills 5 in Louisiana

Officials say just one survives when aircraft goes down and hits a car near post office.

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LAFAYETTE, La. — A small plane crashed into the parking lot of a post office in Louisiana shortly after takeoff on Saturday, killing five people and engulfing a car on the ground in flames, authoritie­s said.

The two-engine Piper Cheyenne crashed about one mile from the Lafayette Regional Airport, Federal Aviation Administra­tion spokesman Tony Molinaro said.

The plane was en route to a college football playoff game in Atlanta between Louisiana State University and Oklahoma, said Steven Ensminger Jr., who told the Associated Press that his wife, Carley McCord, was on board. Ensminger is the son of the offensive coordinato­r for the LSU football team. McCord was a sports reporter.

Video and photos showed a trail of scorched and burning grass around the crash site in the city of Lafayette. A blackened car sat in the post office parking lot, which was carpeted with scattered tree limbs.

Four people were taken to the hospital: one from the plane, one on the ground and two post office employees who were brought in for evaluation, said Lafayette Fire Department spokesman Alton Trahan.

The aircraft was an eight passenger plane, Lafayette Fire Chief Robert Benoit told KLFY-TV.

The plane went down in a part of the city with a scattering of banks, fast food chains and other businesses.

Marty Brady, 22, said the lights went out at his apartment a couple of hundred yards or so away from the crash site as he was preparing to make coffee.

He said he ran out and saw black smoke and flames from the post office parking lot and downed power lines.

“There were some people screaming, and somebody yelled that it was a plane,” he said.

Brady said the plane clipped a power line over the gate to his apartment complex.

“If it had been a little lower, it could have been a lot worse,” he said.

Kevin Jackson told KLFY-TV that he heard a “massive explosion” and saw a “big old ball of flame” when the plane crashed.

He and other eyewitness­es told the TV station that the plane hit a car as it fell and that someone could be heard screaming inside the vehicle.

Lafayette is the fourthlarg­est city in Louisiana, with a population of about 130,000, according to the 2018 census. It is located about 135 miles west of New Orleans.

 ?? Scott Clause Lafayette Advertiser ?? INVESTIGAT­ORS look over the site of a plane crash in Lafayette, La. The twoengine Piper Cheyenne fell about a mile from the airport shortly after takeoff.
Scott Clause Lafayette Advertiser INVESTIGAT­ORS look over the site of a plane crash in Lafayette, La. The twoengine Piper Cheyenne fell about a mile from the airport shortly after takeoff.

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