49 Killed In Lexington Plane Crash

Fuzz420

Are U Here 2 take My Baby
LEXINGTON, Ky. -- A Comair regional jet crashed Sunday at 6:07 a.m. shortly after take-off from Lexington's Blue Grass Field airport. As of 10:30 a.m., there was one confirmed survivor on Flight 5191, which was headed to Atlanta and was carrying 47 passengers and three crew members.

A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration told local media in Lexington that there were "significant fatalities" on the plane, a Canadair CRJ-200. The known survivor, a male, was in critical condition and undergoing surgery at the University of Kentucky hospital.

Comair is the commuter carrier for Delta Air Lines.

The plane crashed on private rural property that local radio stations reported is owned by Nick Bentley Properties, near the intersection of Versailles Road and Rice Road. The location is on the opposite side of Versailles Road from Keeneland Racecourse, which was being used as a staging area for emergency personnel. Major thoroughbred farms in the area, including nurseries Darley-at-Jonabell and Mill Ridge, were not affected.

In a press conference in Erlanger, Ky., Comair president Don Bornhorst said the list of casualties will not be released until the identities have been confirmed and families have been notified.

FAA and National Transportation Safety Board investigators were investigating on site in Lexington, Bornhorst said. Lexington coroner Gary Ginn told reporters the plane was mostly intact with passengers inside but had endured what he termed a "hot fire" upon impact.

Comair has established a toll-free hotline for family and friends seeking information at 1-800-801-0088.

The Blue Grass Field airport reopened shortly after 9 a.m. ET.
 

Shytheed Dumas

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Mar 6, 2006
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I flew for the 3rd time this month last week and got thinking it had been a good long time since there had been a major commerical crash with loss of life in the US and that it probably wouldn't be long - just a sad matter of statistics. Weird thing that it happened a few days later, and so close to home. As always with these things, terribly sad for the families and friends of the victims...
 

swaq

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May 24, 2005
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What is so sad about this is that it was so easily preventable. A stupid mistake cost many lives. It'd suck to be the surviving co-pilot. The rest of his life it's going to hang over his head that he should have noticed they were on a runway that was too short...
 

FoolishOne

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May 14, 2006
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Bel Air, MD
The tower operator at the airport, just for conversation, only has to land and send off planes. The planes line up, he tells them which runway to go to and when they can take off, and such. He does the same for the incoming airplanes. He only handles one plane at any given time either landing or taking off. What did he do? Tell the plane to go to the runway and go to the bathroom? Planes aren't the quickest things on the ground, how could he have just taken off like that? I thought that they went to the end of the runway, radioed to the tower for permission, then took off....and nobody caught it?

I feel sorry for everyone on board to die in such a tragedy that could have been prevented (in my un-airplane/airport knowledge).

»fo