NEW YORK - At least two people were killed when a small aircraft crashed into
a 52-story building on Manhattan's Upper East Side on Wednesday in what appeared
to be an accident, officials said.
Debris falls from an apartment
building on New York's Upper East Side after a small plane with New York
Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle aboard crashed into it Wednesday, Oct. 11,
2006. [AP] |
The four-seat plane was owned by Yankees baseball pitcher Cory Lidle, sources
at the New York police department told Reuters. The FAA confirmed the plane was
owned by Lidle, 34. CNN said the pilot of the plane was Lidle and he was
believed to have been killed.
U.S. and New York officials said they had no reason to believe the crash,
which occurred in overcast weather, was related to terrorism.
A New York police department spokeswoman said the crash killed two people and
possibly more.
Military fighter jets patrolled several U.S. cities as a precaution, the
North American Aerospace Defense Command said.
"NORAD fighters are airborne over numerous cities. They are airborne now as a
prudent measure," said NORAD spokeswoman Kyle Combs. She did not say which
cities were being patrolled, or how many, but added the fighters were sent up
right after the plane crashed into the building.
On Wall Street, U.S. stocks extended losses but quickly recovered once it
became clear the crash was not an attack similar to the hijacked plane attacks
of September 11, 2001.
"We have no reason to believe at this point that it is terrorist related,"
said New York City Police Chief Michael Collins.
Kathy Robinson, a spokeswoman for New York Presbyterian hospital said the
facility had taken in one dead person and nine injured people in its emergency
room.
The plane took off from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey, just miles from
Manhattan, a Port Authority of New York and New Jersey spokesman told Reuters,
adding he did not know how many people were on board.
The aircraft crashed at East 72nd St. and York Avenue, near the East River, a
1980s building housing mainly upscale residential apartments but which also has
a specialized hospital on the bottom 12 floors.
MEMORIES OF SEPT. 11
Luis Gonzales, 23, was working in the building remodeling a nearby apartment
and saw the crash.
"I was looking out the window and I saw the plane coming so close to us and
it swerved to try and avoid the building but it hit the building," he said. "It
was a small plane. We went knocking on doors to try and see if people needed to
get out, but we did not get any answers."
"I am still shaking," he said.
Smoke and flames poured from the upper floors of the high-rise building and
more than 100 firefighters were dispatched to the scene, reviving memories of
the September 11 attacks.
"It's really bad. Flames are shooting from the building. I was on my terrace
and I saw it," said witness Tressa Octave, who lives two blocks away.
The Federal Aviation Administration said preliminary information indicated
the crash was a small plane.
The plane was flying by visual flight rules, meaning the pilot does not have
to be in contact with air traffic controllers.
Justice Department spokeswoman Tasia Scolinos said, "The initial assessment
is that it probably just was a bad accident."
White House spokesman Tony Fratto said President George W. Bush was aware of
the crash in New York and "we're gathering facts" about it. He said White House
not commenting at this point on determining what happened.
Homeland Security spokeswoman Joanna Gonzalez said, "There is no indication
of a terror nexus at this time. There's no specific or credible intelligence
suggesting an imminent threat to the homeland at this time."
The FAA said it imposed temporary flight restrictions in the area following
the crash and caused some departure delays at LaGuardia
airport.