Subscribe to Breaking News emails

You have successfully subscribed to the Breaking News email.

Subscribe today to be the first to to know about breaking news and special reports.

Five killed when small plane crashes in California parking lot

No one on the ground is hurt after the plane, which was attempting an emergency landing, crashed 1½ miles from John Wayne Airport.
by Alex Johnson /  / Updated 

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Five people were killed Sunday when a small plane trying to make an emergency landing crashed in a shopping center parking lot in Orange County, California, southeast of Los Angeles, authorities said.

All of the victims, none of whom were immediately identified, were aboard the twin-engine Cessna when it went down at about 12:30 p.m. (3:30 p.m. ET) as it was headed for an emergency landing at John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana.

No one on the ground was injured, but an unoccupied car in the parking lot was extensively damaged.

The plane was flying from Concord, northeast of San Francisco, to Santa Ana, Orange County Fire Capt. Tony Bommarito said at a news conference. A fire crew was eating lunch just down the street, "so they were on the scene within a minute," he said.

Peter Knudson, a spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating along with the Federal Aviation Administration,. said the plane had been given approval to land at John Wayne after the pilot declared an emergency. Information on the nature of the emergency wasn't immediately available.

Knudson said the pilot didn't declare a flight plan and had decided to fly under visual flight rules, which isn't uncommon in good, clear weather.

The plane went down in a parking lot just outside a Staples business supply store about 1½ miles from the airport. Stores in the shopping center were evacuated, Bommarito said.

"It looks like it went down pretty abruptly," he said, adding that while the plane leaked jet fuel, it didn't ignite.

"I don't know anything about what this pilot did or what he was thinking, but it could have been much more tragic," Bommarito said earlier. "This was a Sunday afternoon, and we have people shopping, so the fact that we have no injuries on the ground is a miracle in itself."

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.
MORE FROM news