SCOTTSDALE, AZ (AZFamily) — The National Transportation Safety Board released a preliminary report on the viral and deadly jet crash that happened earlier this month at Scottsdale Airport.
PHILADELPHIA — A key piece of hardware that aviation experts and pilots said could solve the mystery in the fatal crash of the medical transport Learjet on Jan. 31 turned out to be useless.
The report lays out how Learjet 35A owned by Mötley Crüe singer Vince Neil crashed ... According to the report, the plane departed from Florida on Feb. 10 before stopping to refuel in Austin, Texas.
Six people were on board the Learjet plane when it went down, authorities said. The NTSB said investigators have recovered the plane's cockpit voice recorder. A medical transport jet crashed on ...
The February 10 accident occurred around 2:39 p.m. MST during VFR conditions when a Learjet 35A arriving from Austin, Texas, veered off the runway and struck a parked Gulfstream G200. Video of the ...
A Learjet 35A business jet owned by Mötley Crüe band member, Vince Neil, collided with another plane at Scottsdale Airport in Arizona, leaving one person dead. Per Fox 10 Phoenix, it was ...
Credit: NTSB The cockpit voice recorder did not record the moments before a Learjet 55 medical jet crashed earlier this year in a Philadelphia neighborhood, killing six people on the aircraft and ...
The collision happened on Feb. 10 at approximately 2:38 p.m. when Mötley Crüe rock star Vince Neil’s Learjet 35A veered off the runway after landing and crashed into a Gulfstream G-200 ...