7 dead, 1 seriously injured after private plane crashes at Maine’s Bangor International Airport

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Seven people were killed and just one person miraculously survived after a private jet flipped upside down and crashed as it was taking off in heavy snow in Maine, officials said Monday.

The twin-engine turbo-fan Bombardier Challenger 600 went up in flames after it went down at Bangor International Airport at about 7:45 p.m. on Sunday during the massive winter storm, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

The identities of those on board weren’t immediately available. The jet was registered to a Texas personal-injury law firm.


A crashed private jet on the ground with smoke and emergency personnel in the snow at night.
The twin-engine turbo-fan Bombardier Challenger 600 flipped upside down during a deadly crash at Bangor International Airport. WABI

The sole survivor was a crew member who was left seriously injured, according to officials.
Preliminary details indicated the business jet crashed as it was trying to take off and quickly exploded into flames, investigators said.

Audio from air traffic controllers captured someone saying “aircraft upside down, we have a passenger aircraft upside down” roughly 45 seconds after the jet was cleared to take off.

The cause of the wreck is still under investigation.

Snowfall was heavy at the time but only a couple of inches had fallen at that point.


Emergency services at the scene of the Bombardier Challenger 600 crash at the Bangor Airport in Maine.
The fatal incident at the Maine airport left seven people dead. AP

Other planes were taking off safely at the time, officials said.

The jet was registered to a Houston, Texas-based personal injury law firm.

One of the law firm’s founding partners is listed as the registered agent for the company that owns the plane.

The airport was closed immediately after the crash and won’t reopen until at least noon on Wednesday.

With Post wires

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