Thankfully, my family and I live some few miles north of the crash site in 
Queens.
Another long day.
Jon

Jet Crashes in Queens, N.Y.
No Known Survivors Among 255 on Board
By DIEGO IBARGUEN
The Associated Press 

NEW YORK (Nov. 12) - A jetliner en route to the Dominican Republic broke 
apart minutes after takeoff and crashed in flames in a waterfront 
neighborhood Monday, destroying houses and sowing initial fears of a new 
terrorist atrocity. There were no survivors among the 255 people aboard; six 
others were reported missing on the ground.

''It's looking like it's not a terrorist attack,'' said a senior Bush 
administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity. If there was an 
explosion on the plane - and many bystanders heard one - it was probably 
caused by a catastrophic mechanical failure, investigators said.

Authorities said one of the two black boxes on board the 13-year-old Airbus 
A300 had been found and would be examined for clues.

American Airlines Flight 587 left Kennedy Airport at 9:14 a.m., 74 minutes 
late, lifting off into a clear blue sky. It went down three minutes later in 
the Rockaway Beach section of Queens - a middle-class neighborhood, 15 miles 
from Manhattan, that had lost scores of its people, firefighters and 
financial workers among them, in the World Trade Center catastrophe just two 
months ago.

''I just thought, 'Oh, no, not again,''' said Milena Owens, who was putting 
up Thanksgiving decorations when she heard an explosion.

Gov. George Pataki said the pilot had dumped fuel in Jamaica Bay before the 
plane went down - indicating the crew knew the jet was in danger.

Saud Aziz, 38, said he was raking leaves in front of his home when he looked 
up, spotted the plane and saw a large chunk of a wing fall off. At that 
point, he said, the aircraft went into a spiraling dive and set the 
neighborhood on fire.

''We could feel the heat. The flames were intense,'' he said. ''Even though 
it was burning, it was weird, because it was very quiet.''

Other witnesses reported hearing an explosion and seeing an engine and other 
debris falling off the twin-engine jet as it came down. An engine was found 
intact in a parking lot at a Texaco station, missing the gas pumps by no more 
than 6 feet; neighbors ran to the scene with garden hoses to put out the fire.

Part of a wing appeared to be in Jamaica Bay, just offshore, Mayor Rudolph 
Giuliani said.

''I don't believe there are any survivors at this point,'' Giuliani said. As 
of midafternoon, 161 bodies had been recovered, he said.

Six people were reported missing on the ground, the mayor said.

Roberto Valentin, a Dominican ambassador at large, spoke through tears when 
he said he believed 90 percent of the passengers were Dominican; New York has 
more Dominicans than any other state, with 455,000 in New York City alone.

Relatives of passengers crowded Santo Domingo's airport, sobbing and grasping 
each other after hearing about the crash.

''Oh my God!'' said Miriam Fajardo, crying after being told that her sister 
and three nephews were aboard. ''I hadn't seen them in eight years. Now 
they're gone.''

The rectory of St. Francis de Sales, one block from the crash site, was used 
as an emergency command center. Its pastor, Monsignor Martin Geraghty, was 
called away to bless bodies.

Firefighter Joe O'Brien accompanied the priest. The monsignor blessed about 
20 bodies, which were being laid out on the street right in front of the 
crash site, O'Brien said.

''Right now they're just recovering bodies. The FBI is looking for 
evidence,'' he said. ''And the priests are down there consoling firemen.''

Thirty-five people were treated for injuries at the hospital - mostly rescue 
workers, firefighters and police. All were hurt not in the crash but in the 
aftermath, with most of them suffering smoke inhalation.

Four houses were destroyed, four were seriously damaged, and as many as a 
dozen others sustained lesser damage, the mayor said. Smoke poured from the 
neighborhood and could be seen from miles away.

A city that had already suffered a catastrophe in lower Manhattan and anthrax 
scares reacted immediately by calling a high alert. Fighter planes patrolled 
the skies over New York; bridges, tunnels and all three major airports were 
closed for a time; the Empire State Building was evacuated.

In Washington, President Bush met with advisers, seeking details of the 
crash. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said intelligence 
agencies, the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration were reviewing 
recent intelligence for signs that terrorism was involved.

But White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said there were no ''unusual 
communications'' from the cockpit. And a senior administration official said 
that no threats against airplanes had been received.

The National Transportation Safety Board was designated the lead agency in 
the investigation, signaling that authorities have no information other than 
that a mechanical malfunction - and not a terrorist attack - brought down the 
plane.

A law enforcement source at the scene told The Associated Press that the l
ikelihood of a mechanical problem stemmed from the fact that flames were seen 
shooting out of the left engine and that witnesses reported the plane had 
difficulty climbing and was banking to the left.

Jet engines have been known to break up catastrophically, throwing shrapnel 
into a plane. In 1989, for example, United Airlines DC-10 crashed in Sioux 
City, Iowa, killing 112, after the metal hub that holds the engine's fan 
blades shattered and ruptured the jet's hydraulic lines.

Jennifer Rivara said she was looking out a window from her home about five 
blocks from Monday's crash. ''I saw pieces falling out of the sky,'' she 
said. ''And then I looked over to my left and I saw this huge fireball, and 
the next thing I know, I hear this big rumbling sound. I ran to the door and 
all I saw was big black smoke.''

The plane was lying on top of about 12 homes, said Ed Williams, community 
liaison for Rep. Gregory Meeks.

Giuliani said his first thought upon hearing about the crash was '''Oh, my 
God.' I just passed the church in which I've been to, I think, 10 funerals 
here. Rockaway was particularly hard hit'' in the Trade Center disaster, he 
said.

The mayor went to an airport hotel where 600 family members of those on board 
the plane had assembled; he led them in a moment of silent prayer.

''This is a horrible, horrible day,'' the governor told them.

The Trade Center was destroyed by two Boeing 767s hijacked out of Boston's 
Logan Airport. One of the planes was operated by American, the other by 
United.

Jackie Weiss, 50, a secretary at Rockaway High School, said: ''I'm really 
devastated. My own son was telling me, when I was upset by the World Trade 
Center, 'But you didn't lose any family members.' But seeing something like 
this ... I feel the world is coming to an end.''

 AP-NY-11-12-01 1541EST

Copyright 2001 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news 
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed 
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Reply via email to