The Latest: NTSB says no distress calls heard in plane crash
Officials investigating the fiery Ohio plane crash that killed nine people say a pilot that had just landed at a nearby airport reported hearing no distress calls despite being on the same communications frequency as the aircraft that went down.
Officials from the National Transportation Safety Board say the crashed plane had been expected to land at a small Akron airport that doesn't have a control tower, so the incoming flight was guided by a larger airport in the area.
Investigators have recovered the cockpit voice recorder from an Ohio plane crash that killed nine people.
The National Transportation Safety Board also said Wednesday that it has reviewed surveillance video that shows the plane seconds before it hit an unoccupied apartment building in Akron.
The vice chairman from the NTSB says the video shows the plane flying at a low altitude Monday afternoon and banking to left before it exploded into flames and a cloud of black smoke.
A man who lived at the Ohio apartment building destroyed in a fiery plane crash says an errand to buy Hot Pockets saved his life.
Officials have confirmed that nine people were killed when the business jet they were in crashed into a northeast Ohio apartment building.
Ohio State Highway Patrol Lt. Bill Haymaker says Wednesday that two pilots and seven passengers were killed aboard the 10-seat Hawker H25 when it clipped utility wires and crashed into a four-unit apartment building Tuesday afternoon in Akron, sparking a fire that destroyed the building.
Florida real-estate company Pebb Enterprises says in a statement that two of its executives and five employees were among the plane's passengers.
A Florida real estate company says seven of its associates were among the nine people believed killed when a small jet crashed into an apartment building in northeast Ohio.
Cleveland.com (http://bit.ly/1HHRQ2O ) reports that another sister, Jeannie Ferrara, said Smoot was with a gr