UPS plane crash death toll rises to 13
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Denis and Arnela Kustric started their trucking business in 2024. Now their truck and trailer are ashes from the UPS plane crash.
Megan Washburn, an employee of Grade A Auto Parts, has been missing since the crash on Tuesday, according to the business's owner Sean Garber.
At least 13 people were killed and several others injured after a UPS plane crashed shortly after taking off from the Louisville International Airport on Tuesday.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Videos from phones, cars and security cameras captured the tragic final moments of a UPS cargo plane as it caught fire and crashed in a massive explosion just outside Louisville’s airport, killing at least 12 people and carving a path of destruction on the ground.
More than two dozen officials with the National Transportation and Safety Board are on site and have begun sifting through the mangled remnants of a UPS cargo plane that crashed after an engine detached during takeoff near Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport.
A UPS cargo plane caught fire while struggling to take off from the Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport on Nov. 4
Debbie Self, the owner of Stooges Bar in Louisville, said she can't believe "it’s still there" after a UPS plane crashed Nov. 4.
The power had just gone off and the ground was shaking at Grade A Auto Parts when the owner received a hysterical video call from his chief financial officer.