Small plane crashes into San Diego neighborhood in 'direct hit to multiple homes'
- Early on May 22, a private jet collided with a military residential area in San Diego, causing multiple fires and damaging several homes and vehicles.
- The jet, registered in the Midwest, took off from Wichita's Colonel James Jabara Airport and crashed during very foggy weather just before 4 a.m.
- The crash displaced about 100 residents and hospitalized five family members for smoke inhalation while others suffered injuries fleeing the fire.
- San Diego Fire Chief Dan Eddy noted that dense fog was present when the private plane went down, while Police Chief Scott Wahl described the aftermath as extremely disturbing to witness.
- The investigation is being led by the National Transportation Safety Board, as officials work to identify the number of victims and determine the causes of the crash.
465 Articles
465 Articles
Snow of Devastation – Small Plane Crashes Into Residential Area in San Diego
In the south of California, on the border with Mexico, a small plane crashed into the middle of a residential area. A huge debris field was created. However, as a miracle, there were apparently no other people harmed except the aircraft occupants.
2 people killed when private plane crashes in San Diego, video reveals charred neighborhood
A private jet crashed into military housing in San Diego during foggy weather early Thursday, igniting cars parked along a suburban neighborhood block and killing multiple people on board the plane, authorities said.

Multiple people on private plane that crashed into San Diego neighborhood are dead
Authorities say a private jet crashed into military housing in San Diego during foggy weather, igniting parked cars and killing multiple people on board the plane.

Several Killed in California Aviation Accident · Global Voices
Several people died this Thursday in the crash of a small private plane that crashed overnight in a residential neighborhood of San Diego, California, in the west of the United States, according to local authorities. “We believe there are several fatalities,” said Dan Eddy, of the San Diego Fire Department, and explained that most likely the deceased were on the plane and not in vehicles and homes damaged in the accident. The United States Feder…
Citation apparently struck wires on approach
A Cessna Citation 550 likely struck high-voltage power lines while approaching Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport in San Diego just before 4 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time on May 22. The aircraft was approaching the end of the second leg of a long overnight from New York in instrument conditions and without the benefit of a local altimeter setting—which may become a focus of the NTSB investigation.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 60% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage