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Brazil plane crash latest: All 62 on board dead after crash near Sao Paulo

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Plane spirals out of sky crashing into Brazil hillside

Brazilian civil defense teams have recovered at least 21 bodies from the wreckage of a plane that crashed in Brazil’s Sao Paulo state on Friday, killing all 62 people on board.

VoePass flight 2283 took off from Cascavel, in the state of Parana, just before noon on its way to the Sao Paulo-Guarulhos International Airport. The ATR-72 lost signal around 1:22 pm local time and crashed in Vinhedo, 50 miles northwest of Sao Paulo city.

Captain Danilo Santos Romano, a pilot with the Voepass airline since 2022, was flying the ATR-72 when it crashed, according to Brazilian outlet Globo TV News.

Other crew members included co-pilot Humberto de Campos Alencar e Silva, 61, and flight attendant Débora Soper Avila, 29, according to the outlet, which viewed the downed flight’s manifest.

Brazilian officials are investigating the cause of the crash, and have recovered the plan’s black box.

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Ice may have contributed to Brazil plane crash, deadliest incident of 2024

(AP)

Friday’s plane crash was the deadliest since January 2023, when 72 people died in Nepal while flying in an ATR-72, the same type of craft that went down in Brazil.

Local media suggested that the “possibility of the formation of ice” may have caused the crash, VOA reports.

Josh Marcus10 August 2024 16:45

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Bodies recovered from crash site as death toll revised

(AP)

Brazilian civil defense teams working overnight recovered the bodies of at least 21 people from the site of a Friday plane crash near Sao Paulo, which killed all 62 onboard, Reuters reports.

The bodies have been moved to Sao Paolo’s police morgue.

In the midst of the recovery effort, Voepass, the airline whose plane went down, disclosed an additional, unaccounted for passenger was aboard the regional jet, bringing the total death toll up to 58 passengers and four crew.

Josh Marcus10 August 2024 15:43

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Watch: Plane spirals out of sky crashing into Brazil hillside

Plane spirals out of sky crashing into Brazil hillside

Maroosha Muzaffar10 August 2024 13:00

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ICYMI: Flightradar24 data: minute-by-minute record of VoePass flight 2283

Data from the aircraft-tracking service Flightradar24 provides further information on VoePass flight 2283 before it crashed with the loss of 61 lives.

The aircraft appears to have left the stand at Cascavel airport 16 minutes late, at 11:56am. After a very short taxi it took off two minutes later, reaching its cruising altitude of 17,000 feet at 12:22 pm. It maintained this height for almost an hour.

Flightradar24 relies on crowdsourcing from volunteers who receive data transmitted by aircraft and feed it on to the company’s base in Stockholm. The data may not represent the true picture; during the cruise, Flightradar24 shows the ground speed varying from 94 to 357 knots, an implausible range.

The rapid descent begins at 1:21 pm, reaching a maximum vertical speed of 24,000 feet per minute – about 10 times the normal rate of descent, and corresponding to 275mph. The last data transmission is at 1:22 pm, when the aircraft is show as being at 4,100 feet with a vertical speed of over 12,000 feet per minute, around 140mph.

The data may help investigators from Brazil’s National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC) determine the causes of the tragedy.

Simon Calder10 August 2024 12:00

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ICYMI: Airline, manufacturer release statements on crash

The airline VoePass and the plane manufacturer ATR have both issued statements regarding today’s crash.

“There is still no confirmation of how the accident occurred or the current situation of the people on board,” a statement from VoePass reads.

Meanwhile, ATR said it is working to support an investigation into the crash.

“What we can say at this point in time is that ATR has been informed that an accident occurred in Vinhedo, Brazil involving an ATR 72-500,” their statement reads. “Our first thoughts are with all the individuals affected by this event. The ATR specialists are fully engaged to support both the investigation and the customer.”

Katie Hawkinson10 August 2024 11:00

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‘Moment of panic’: witness speaks out

A nearby resident told CNN she witnessed Voepass flight 2283 crash into her neighborhood as she was eating lunch.

She called the crash a “moment of panic” for the city of Vinhedo. She told the outlet she ducked down and began praying as the plane hit near her home.

The plane, carrying 68 people, hit multiple houses as it crashed, Brazil’s Civil Defense told CNN.

Katie Hawkinson10 August 2024 10:00

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Brazil plane crash: 61 people on board aircraft, airline says

President says all passengers of VoePass plane presumed dead after footage shows burning wreck in residential area of Sao Paulo state.

Read the detailed story here:

Maroosha Muzaffar10 August 2024 09:00

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Watch: Plane spirals out of sky crashing into Brazil hillside

Plane spirals out of sky crashing into Brazil hillside

Katie Hawkinson10 August 2024 08:00

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Flightradar24 data: minute-by-minute record of VoePass flight 2283

Data from the aircraft-tracking service Flightradar24 provides further information on VoePass flight 2283 before it crashed with the loss of 61 lives.

The aircraft appears to have left the stand at Cascavel airport 16 minutes late, at 11:56am. After a very short taxi it took off two minutes later, reaching its cruising altitude of 17,000 feet at 12:22 pm. It maintained this height for almost an hour.

Flightradar24 relies on crowdsourcing from volunteers who receive data transmitted by aircraft and feed it on to the company’s base in Stockholm. The data may not represent the true picture; during the cruise, Flightradar24 shows the ground speed varying from 94 to 357 knots, an implausible range.

The rapid descent begins at 1:21 pm, reaching a maximum vertical speed of 24,000 feet per minute – about 10 times the normal rate of descent, and corresponding to 275mph. The last data transmission is at 1:22 pm, when the aircraft is show as being at 4,100 feet with a vertical speed of over 12,000 feet per minute, around 140mph.

The data may help investigators from Brazil’s National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC) determine the causes of the tragedy.

Simon Calder10 August 2024 07:00

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ATR-72: successful regional aircraft that has been involved in a dozen fatal crashes

The aircraft involved in the fatal crash in Brazil was a 14-year-old ATR-27, registered as PS-VPB.

The ATR 72, built by a Franco-Italian joint venture, has been in service since 1989. It seats up to 78 passenger and is described by its maker as “the most fuel efficient regional aircraft”.

The plane type is popular for domestic operations in India, Brazil, New Zealand, Thailand, Russia and Spain’s Canary Islands.

In the UK, passengers are most likely to fly on an ATR-72 on Aer Lingus Regional services operated by Emerald Airlines, and on domestic flights on Loganair. Like most other aircraft types that have been in operation for decades, the ATR 72 has been involved in a number of tragedies in its 35-year history. The event on 9 August 2024 was the 12th.

The first, in 1994, was a domestic flight with American Eagle from Indianapolis to Chicago. The wings iced up while the aircraft was in a holding pattern. All 68 passengers and crew died.

The next accident was over a decade later, off the coast of Palermo, in 2005 involving a Tuninter aircraft flying from Bari in Italy to Djerba in Tunisia. Engineers had mistakenly fitted a fuel gauge intended for the smaller ATR-42. The plane ran out of fuel and ditched at high speed in the Mediterranean with the loss of 16 lives; 23 people survived.

Subsequent crashes were on domestic flights in Thailand, Cuba, Russia, Laos and Taiwan – where two ATR-72s belonging to TransAsia Airways crashed within eight months, in July 2014 and February 2015.

The final two fatal crashes before the Brazilian tragedy were both domestic flights in nations with poor aviation safety records: Iran in 2018, in which 65 people died, and Nepal in 2023, killing 72 people.

Simon Calder10 August 2024 06:00

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