Miami Herald (Sunday)

ALL SURVIVE FLORIDA CRASH

- BY MARTIN VASSOLO mvassolo@miamiheral­d.com

A charter plane that had been carrying 143 people from Cuba to Florida sits in a river at the end of a runway Saturday in Jacksonvil­le. The Boeing 737 slid off the runway Friday night into the St. Johns River, a release said. No fatalities were reported. Story,

Federal investigat­ors Saturday begin piecing together what caused a military aircraft carrying 143 people and at least four pets to slide off a U.S. Navy runway in Jacksonvil­le and crash into a river Friday night. Everyone aboard escaped with minor injuries at worst, but authoritie­s reportedly presume pets aboard the Boeing 737 to be dead.

Miami Air Internatio­nal Flight 293 departed from Guantanamo Bay in Cuba and experience­d a rough landing at Naval Air Station at about 9:50 p.m.

“Many people are asking about the pets aboard the aircraft ...” a U.S. Navy spokespers­on said in a statement posted to Facebook. “Unfortunat­ely, they have not been retrieved yet due to safety issues with the aircraft. Our hearts and prayers go out to those pet owners during this terrible incident.”

USA Today reports that there were four pets listed on the flight’s manifest and they are presumed dead, as the cargo hold filled with water during the landing.

During a news conference Saturday to announce updates to the investigat­ion into the crash, including the safe recovery of the aircraft’s flight data recorder, Capt. Michael Conner of NAS Jacksonvil­le said first responders tried to locate the animals but could not see any above the water line and left the area in fear for their own safety.

“We asked them to specifical­ly look for pet carriers, and they could not see any ... above the water line,” he said. “So we obviously do not have confirmati­on but we are continuing to do what we can to positively determine the status of the pets.”

Conner, who said he is a pet owner, said his “heart sunk” when he learned animals were aboard the plane.

“I spoke with some of the pet owners last night; it was very obviously a rough situation. Our sympathies and my heart goes out to those families.”

National Transporta­tion Safety Board Vice Chairman Bruce Landsberg said during the news conference that the aircraft’s flight data recorder, which did not sustain damage, was on its way to the NTSB laboratory in Washington, D.C., and that authoritie­s were working to remove the plane from the river to retrieve the cockpit voice recorder.

“We cannot get to it until the aircraft is moved,” he said.

Federal investigat­ors arrived at the scene on Saturday and have yet to determine what caused the crash. Among the factors being investigat­ed are the status of the runway, weather at the time of landing and possible human error, Landsberg said.

The flight data recorder will give investigat­ors raw data on air speed, altitude, point of touchdown and other details.

“We expect to get a very full report on that shortly,” he said.

Landsberg said Miami

Air Internatio­nal, which operates charter flights from Guantánamo to Naval air stations in Jacksonvil­le and Virginia, had been involved in one accident during its existence, a hard landing in Pennsylvan­ia in 2015.

The charter company operates five Boeing aircraft. The plane involved in Friday’s crash, a Boeing 737-800, was built in 2001 and has no history of prior incidents, Landsberg said. There are more than 900 Boeing 737-800 planes in use in the U.S. and scores more internatio­nally, he said.

Landsberg said the pavement of the runway, which measures about 9,000 feet long and 200 feet wide, is not marked by grooves, which are designed to divert water quickly off the runway during heavy rain. It is unclear if that was a factor Friday, he said.

 ?? GARY MCCULLOUGH AP ??
GARY MCCULLOUGH AP
 ?? WILL DICKEY-- AP ?? The Boeing 737 arrived at Naval Air Station Jacksonvil­le from Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
WILL DICKEY-- AP The Boeing 737 arrived at Naval Air Station Jacksonvil­le from Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

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