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NTSB: Plane crashed after wing fell off
(AP)
Updated: 2005-12-21 19:03

Investigators plan to scour maintenance and flight records in search of evidence that could show why a seaplane's wing broke off during flight, causing the plane to plummet into the water, killing all 20 people on board.


The wing of a seaplane that crashed off Miami Beach, Fla., is lifted by a crane on a barge from the waters of the crash site Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2005. The crash on Monday killed all 20 people on board. The rest won't be raised until Wednesday, Coast Guard spokesman Dana Warr said. Rosenker called it a delicate operation because moving the plane too quickly could cause it to break under the weight of the water. [AP]

The propeller and engine were still attached when salvage crews raised the right wing from the channel Tuesday where the 58-year-old turboprop aircraft crashed.

The plane, headed to the Bahamas, crashed Monday into the mouth of Government Cut channel off the southern tip of Miami Beach within sight of horrified beachgoers. Investigators said Tuesday the crash was apparently caused when the wing broke off.

Crews planned to raise the rest of the plane from 35 feet of water Wednesday. Mark Rosenker, acting chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, said the process would be slow and cautious because moving the plane too quickly could cause it to break under the weight of the water.

Investigators also hoped to recover the cockpit voice recorder to see if it captured the last words of the pilots and other clues. But the main portion of the recorder was in the tail, which Rosenker said was difficult to reach because the plane was mangled.

Specialists will try to determine whether corrosion and stress contributed to the wing splitting from the fuselage. It could take nine months to a year to report on the probable cause of the crash, Rosenker said.

"Unfortunately, we still have a great distance to go," he said.
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