NEW YORK -- A small World War II vintage
plane celebrating its 75th anniversary crashed in the Hudson River
between New York and New Jersey on Friday, and police recovered a body
from the single-seat plane, CBS New York station WCBS reported.
The
Federal Aviation Administration said it received a report that a P-47
Thunderbolt aircraft went down in the river two miles south of the
George Washington Bridge around 7:30 p.m.
New
York Police Department Det. Michael Debonis said scuba divers recovered
the body of a 56-year-old man from the plane around 10:30 p.m.
Police
did not confirm the body was that of the pilot, the only person who was
aboard the plane. The pilot's name was not made public.
Around 9 p.m., New Jersey State Police tweeted that the pilot had
been rescued and was being transported to the hospital with minor
injuries. The department backtracked about an hour later and said the
investigation was continuing, with the NYPD in charge.
The FAA
said the P-47 was one of three aircraft that departed from Republic
Airport in Farmingdale, on Long Island, just east of New York City. The
other two aircraft returned to the airport and landed safely.
Witness
Frank Piazza captured a photo showing the wing of the plane sticking up
from the water. Ultimately, the aircraft was completely submerged in
the river, according to WCBS.
The
American Airpower Museum is celebrating the 75th anniversary of the
P-47 Thunderbolt this weekend. Museum spokesman Gary Lewi said the plane
is kept at the museum and was taking part in an air show at nearby
Jones Beach.
"Apparently the aircraft suffered an inflight engine
failure and the pilot put it into the Hudson," Lewi said. "I'm told the
aircraft is at the bottom of the Hudson."
The three planes, the
P-47, a P-40 and a photo plane, had been flying over the Hudson to shoot
promotional material for the Jones Beach air show, Lewi said.
North
Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue co-director Jeff Welz told The Jersey
Journal that firefighters and the Coast Guard responded after the Friday
night crash. He said the plane sank "pretty quickly."
Welz initially said the plane was in the area for Fleet Week activities, but Lewi said that was incorrect.
"When
I first saw them go past, it was three planes bunched up together and I
was like, they're flying extremely close to each other," witness Camara
Dodd told CBS New York. "And then like no less than 10 minutes later I
turned over my shoulder and one was going down."
"When
we looked to our left, the only thing we saw was the tail end of it,
but we didn't hear no engine. But then we also saw the pilot - he came
up, and he also just went back down, but he never came up," added
witness Nick Ciccolella, who was dining with Dodd.
"You could see
him trying to get out of the harness of whatever - whatever he was
strapped to, the seatbelt or harness or whatever, but he couldn't get
out," Dodd said.
"I thought was making a water landing, but then
we saw the other planes turning around and we thought something is
wrong," said witness Sabine De Meuter.
"We were just hoping that
the guy comes up," said witness Teju Raval. "We were just praying that
somebody goes there and somebody goes there, or some diver or somebody
goes there and pulls him out."
John Michael Arcella posted YouTube
video of the plane going down. He said that he was riding his bike on
the riverside bike path when he saw a plane flying low with a trail of
smoke behind it.
The search evoked memories of the "Miracle on the Hudson,"
the emergency landing of a U.S. Airways plane on the river in January
2009. Friday's crash happened about two miles away, WCBS reported.
Pilot
Capt. Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger -- now a CBS News aviation and
safety analyst -- was forced to bring the plane down on the Hudson after
it struck a flock of geese after takeoff and lost power in both
engines. All 155 people on board the aircraft survived.
No comments:
Post a Comment