Plane crash in upstate NY
kills 49 people
CLARENCE, N.Y. – A
sputtering commuter plane
slammed into a suburban
Buffalo home in a fiery
explosion that killed all 48
people on board and one
person on the ground,
authorities said.
Flames silhouetted the
shattered home after
Continental Connection
Flight 3407 plummeted
into it around 10:20 p.m.
"The whole sky was lit up
orange," said Bob Dworak,
who lives less than a mile
from the crash site. "All
the sudden, there was a big
bang, and the house shook."
The 74-seat Q400 Bombardier
aircraft was carrying 5,000
pounds of fuel and
apparently exploded on
impact,
Erie County Executive Chris
Collins said.
Firefighters got as close to
the plane as they could, he
said. "They were shouting
out to see if there were any
survivors on the plane.
Truly a very heroic effort,
but there were no survivors."
The twin-turboprop operated
by
Colgan Air was flying
from
Newark Liberty International
Airport in
New Jersey to
Buffalo Niagara
International Airport
in light snow, fog and 17
mph winds.
Prior to the crash, the
voice of a female pilot on
Flight 3407 could be heard
communicating with
air traffic controllers,
according to a recording of
the
Buffalo air traffic control's
radio messages shortly
before the crash captured by
the Web site
http://www.liveatc.net.
Neither the controller nor
the pilot shows any concern
that anything is out of the
ordinary as the airplane is
asked to fly at 2,300 feet.
A minute later, the
controller tries to contact
the plane but hears no
response. After a pause, he
tries to contact the plane
again.

Then the controller asks the
pilot of a nearby
Delta Air Lines plane
to see whether he can see
the Continental flight. The
Delta pilot says no.
About three to four minutes
after that, he tells an
unidentified listener to
contact authorities on the
ground in the Clarence area.
"You need to find if
anything is on the ground,"
the controller says. "All I
can tell you is the aircraft
is over the marker (landing
beacon), and we're not
talking to them now."
Later, he tells all aircraft
monitoring the same
frequency: "We did have a
Dash 8 over the marker that
didn't make the airport. He
appears to be about five
miles away from the airport."
While residents of his
neighborhood about 10 miles
from the Buffalo airport
were used to planes rumbling
overhead, witnesses said
this one sounded louder than
usual, sputtered and made
some odd noises.
After hearing the crash,
Dworak drove over to take a
look, and "all we were
seeing was 50 to 100 foot
flames and a pile of rubble
on the ground. It looked
like the house just got
destroyed the instant it got
hit."
Witness Tony Tatro said he
saw the plane flying low and
knew it was in trouble.

"It was not spiraling at
all. The left wing was a
little low," he told WGRZ-TV.
Doug Hartmayer, a spokesman
for the
Niagara Frontier
Transportation Authority
that operates the airport,
said it was unknown if the
airport reported any trouble.
"There is an extensive
investigation as we speak,"
Hartmayer said. "There was
very little or any
communication before the
crash."
"The plane simply dropped
off the radar screen," he
said.
Amy Kudwa, a spokeswoman for
the Department of Homeland
Security in Washington, said
there was no indication
terrorism was involved.
"All indications are that
this was an air-safety event,"
she said.
The National Transportation
Safety Board said it
was sending a team of crash
investigators, headed by
Lorenda Ward, to Buffalo
early Friday.
Federal Aviation
Administration spokeswoman
Laura Brown said the agency
would join the NTSB
investigation. The NTSB
planned a 4 a.m. news
conference in Clarence.

It was the first fatal crash
of a commercial airliner in
the United States since Aug.
27, 2006, when 49 people
were killed after a Comair
jetliner took off from a
Lexington, Ky., runway that
was too short.
The newest member of
Bombardier's Dash-8 class
aircraft, the Q400 had its
first flight in 1998 and
entered commercial service
in February 2000.
Houston-based Continental
Airlines issued a
statement saying that
preliminary information
showed the plane carried 44
passengers and a crew of
four.
"At this time, the full
resources of Colgan Air's
accident response team are
being mobilized and will be
devoted to cooperating with
all authorities responding
to the accident and to
contacting family members
and providing assistance to
them," the statement said.
"Continental extends its
deepest sympathy to the
family members and loved
ones of those involved in
this accident," said
Larry Kellner,
chairman and CEO of
Continental Airlines,
in a later statement. "Our
thoughts and prayers are
with all of the family
members and loved ones of
those involved in the flight
3407 tragedy."
Continental representatives
were traveling to Buffalo to
provide assistance to Colgan
in its response to the
accident. A family
assistance center is being
established in the area.
Chris Kausner, believing his
sister was on the plane,
rushed to a hastily
established command center
after calling his
vacationing mother in
Florida to break the
news.
"To tell you the truth, I
heard my mother make a noise
on the phone that I've never
heard before. So not good,
not good," he told reporters.
He told
The Buffalo News his
sister, Ellyce, was a law
student at Florida Coastal
University in
Jacksonville and on
her way home for a visit.
Sue Bourque told the
newspaper her sister,
Beverly Eckert, was aboard
the plane. Eckert is the
widow of Sean Rooney, who
was killed in the
Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks on the
World Trade Center.
Bourque said that while the
family had not yet received
official confirmation of her
sister's fate, the reality
was settling in.
"We know she was on that
plane," she told the
newspaper, "and now she's
with him."
Clarence emergency control
director Dave Bissonette
said the crash killed one
person on the ground.
Clarence is a growing
eastern suburb of
Buffalo, largely
residential but with rural
stretches. The crash site is
a street of older,
single-family homes which
apparently back up to wooded
area.
Manassas, Va.-based
Colgan Air said in a
statement that airline
personnel and local
authorities were working to
confirm the number of people
on board and their
identities.
Twelve homes were evacuated
near the crash site, about
10 miles from the airport.
The tail or part of a wing
was visible through flames
and thick smoke that
engulfed the scene. While
the fire was contained,
smoke still billowed over
the scene about four hours
later. Houses in the
neighborhood are only about
20-25 feet apart.
The house that was
demolished was a two-story,
wood-frame house that backed
up to a large open field.
"The fact that the damage is
limited to the one residence
is really amazing," said
state police spokeswoman
Rebecca Gibbons.
As family members of the
victims trickled in to the
airport in the overnight
hours, they were escorted by
airport personnel to a
private area.
Two women believed to be
residents of the
neighborhood were being
treated at
Millard Fillmore Suburban
Hospital for what
were described as non-life
threatening injuries,
hospital spokesman Michael
Hughes said. They were
transported by ambulance at
approximately 11:35 p.m.
The crash came less than a
month after a
US Airways pilot
guided his crippled plane to
a landing in the
Hudson River off
Manhattan, saving the
lives of all 155 people
aboard. Birds had apparently
disabled both its engines.
On Dec. 20, a
Continental Airlines plane
veered off a runway and slid
into a snowy field at the
Denver airport, injuring 38
people.
Continental's release said
relatives and friends of
those on Flight 3407 who
wanted to give or receive
information about those on
board could telephone a
special family assistance
number, 1-800-621-3263.