Home>News Center>World
         
 

19 said killed in plane crash in US
(AP)
Updated: 2005-12-20 08:40

"It exploded in the air and one of the wings flew out of there. The other part of the plane was on fire and it just went straight down," said Maurice D'Giovianni, 42, a surfer who was in the water at the time.

Coast Guard spokesman Dana Warr also saw the crash from the Coast Guard office on an island in a channel known as Government Cut. "Everything looked normal, I saw the aircraft take off like it does every other times. I didn't think anything of it when I saw the black smoke from the pier, until I then heard the Coast Guard alarms go off," he said.

The National Transportation Safety Board sent a team to investigate.

The plane went down near the mouth of Government Cut, a channel that cruise ships and freighters take past South Beach into the Port of Miami. The channel is up to 30 feet deep near the crash site, but parts of the plane could be seen in shallower areas.

The skies were cloudy, but there was no rain or lightning in the area at the time of the crash.

Coast Guardsmen and emergency workers wearing protective suits hauled bodies up from rescue boats, rushing to find victims before darkness fell. Law enforcement speedboats, divers and helicopters took part in the search and were joined by others in private boats, on personal watercraft and on surfboards.

Rescuers search the crash site after a seaplane crashed and sank off Miami Beach into the city's main shipping channel, December 19, 2005.
Rescuers search the crash site after a seaplane crashed and sank off Miami Beach into the city's main shipping channel, December 19, 2005.[Reuters]
Chalk's Ocean Airways flies between Miami and the Bahamas, using planes that take off and land on the water. Chalk's aircraft have been featured in TV shows such as "Miami Vice." Its seaplanes take off in view of the port and the multimillion-dollar homes that dot islands in the bay.

Founded by Arthur "Pappy" Chalk in 1919, the airline thrived during Prohibition, taking bootleggers, their customers and customs agents to Bimini. According to the airline, its most famous regular passenger was Ernest Hemingway, who flew to Bimini to go big-game fishing.

One of its planes was hijacked to Cuba in 1974 and the company has since had a policy of not carrying enough fuel to get to Havana.

Two years later, the airline was sold to Resorts International, which owned properties on Paradise Island. Donald Trump bought it in 1988 and sold it a few months later to Merv Griffin. The owner as of 1995 was Seth Atwood of United Capital Corporation of Illinois/Atwood Enterprises.

According to its Web site, Chalk's operates 17-passenger Turbine Mallards.

Chalk's general manager Roger Nair said it was the airline's first accident with a passenger fatality. The National Transportation Safety Board database indicates no fatal accidents involving passengers for Chalk's since 1982, when the database began.

Chalk's only crash involving fatalities happened in 1994, when two pilots died in a crash of their seaplane near Key West.


Page: 12



Victory day celebrations in Srinagar
EU's Mandelson says no progress at WTO trade talks
Probe launched into fuel depot blaze near London
 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

US paper gets full access to China court proceedings

 

   
 

Prudent fiscal policy to continue - Premier

 

   
 

NGOs will get State funds to help poor

 

   
 

Ding pots major title, breaks into big league

 

   
 

Iran's president bans all western music

 

   
 

Bush vigorously defends domestic spying

 

   
  Saddam recounts his capture to British tabloid
   
  Bush asserts US is winning Iraq war
   
  US lawmakers call for probe into domestic spying program
   
  Bill Gates named Time's 'Person of the Year'
   
  North Korea threatens talks boycott unless US drops 'hostile policy'
   
  Arab Gulf mulls nuclear weapons-free zone, asking Iran to join
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement