New images show UPS deadly plane crash
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It's been two weeks since UPS Flight 2976 crashed trying to take off from Louisville's airport. Fourteen people, including the three pilots aboard the plane, were killed.
Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg expects the city to be paid back for costs associated with the UPS plane crash response. How the process works.
About 1,200 people attended the free Louisville Orchestra concert in hopes of feeling unity as the city continues to grief the fatal crash that took 14 lives.
The jet continued to climb and cleared a fence before its left main landing gear hit the roof of a UPS warehouse beyond the runway at Louisville’s Muhammad Ali International Airport. The plane then crashed in an industrial area beyond the warehouse that included a petroleum recycling facility, the report said.
Federal investigators released a preliminary report on the deadly crash of a UPS cargo plane in Louisville, Kentucky, that killed 14 people earlier this month, revealing that hardware meant to hold one of the plane's engines in place showed signs of fatigue and "overstress failure.
New images from airport security video shows the UPS plane's left engine detach from the wing moments before the deadly crash.
With a lawsuit brewing, UPS Airlines President Bill Moore joined Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg Tuesday to offer support for impacted families and businesses.
In total, 14 people died, including Diamond and two other pilots, when UPS Flight 2976 crashed just after take off on Nov. 4 after its left wing caught fire.