San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Skydiving plane crashes after takeoff, killing all 11 aboard

- By Audrey McAvoy and Andrew Selsky Audrey McAvoy and Andrew Selsky are Associated Press writers.

HONOLULU — A skydiving plane crashed and burst into flames just after takeoff from a small seaside airfield on the island of Oahu, killing 11 people, officials said Saturday.

Authoritie­s initially reported that nine people died in the crash Friday evening and that three of them were customers of a skydiving company and six were employees.

But the Hawaii Department of Transporta­tion tweeted Saturday that officials later “confirmed there were 11 people on board the plane” and no survivors. The twin-engine Beechcraft King Air plane took off from Dillingham Airfield on the north shore of the island.

The plane was operated by the Oahu Parachute Center skydiving company and the ratio of employees to customers suggested that tandem jumps may have been planned in which the customers would have jumped while attached to experience­d skydivers, said Tim Sakahara, a spokesman for the Hawaii Department of Transporta­tion.

Fire chief Manuel Neves described the site of the crash near the airport’s perimeter as being “quite a ways away from the runway” and said that some family members of those aboard were at the airport when the plane went down at about 6:30 p.m.

“In my 40 years as a firefighte­r here in Hawaii, this is the most tragic aircraft incident that we’ve had,” Neves said.

The plane was engulfed in flames when firefighte­rs made it to the crash site, which is about a one-hour drive from Honolulu, Neves said. The victims were not identified.

Two Federal Aviation Administra­tion inspectors went to the crash site Friday and investigat­ors with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board were to join them, said safety board spokesman Eric Weiss.

The plane with two turboprop engines was manufactur­ed in 1967, FAA records said. The phone for Oahu Parachute Center went unanswered Saturday.

Dillingham Airfield is used mostly for skydiving and glider flights. Hawaii shares the airfield with the Army, which uses it for helicopter night-vision training.

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