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The National Transportation Safety Board publishes new findings on the plane crash in the northeast of Philadelphia

Philadelphia (WPVI) – The National Transportation Safety Board published its preliminary report on the northeast aircraft crash in Philadelphia on January 31, in which seven people were dead.

In the report published on Thursday, the NTSB announced that it could clean and repair the cockpit language recorder, which was buried underground by the effects of the crash.

However, the NTSB said that the recorder did not record the last flight of the aircraft. The investigators continued to say that the device had not accepted Audio for several years.

NTSB publishes a picture of the Learjet 55 Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR), which crashed on January 31 in Philadelphia

NTSB

The extended flooring warning system computer (EGPWS) was also restored from the crash scene.

The NTSB stated that the device could contain flight data and was sent to the manufacturer for evaluation. The investigators said that the evaluation has not yet been completed.

The aircraft started from the Northeast Philadelphia Airport, and the NTSB said that the flight crew was standing with the air traffic control tower at the time of crash.

The NTSB said there was no emergency call for the crew.

Investigators who combed by debris after the fatal aircraft crash of Philadelphia,

The crash left a debris field 1,410 feet long and 840 feet wide.

The number of deaths remains at seven and the number of injuries remains 24 of them, according to the NTSB, four people were seriously injured, while the other 20 minor injuries suffered.

There was nothing in the report on a possible cause of this crash. These findings are probably only published when the NTSB issues its final report, which may not come out for another year.

The Jet Rescue Air Ambulance drove on Friday, January 31st, shortly before 6.10 p.m. in the Cottman Avenue in front of the Roosevelt Mall.

The crash sent a fireball into the sky and rubbed the block down.

All six people on board the aircraft were killed, as were a man who was on the ground in his car at the time of the crash.

A fireball that broke out in the sky after a plane crash on Friday evening in the northeast of Philadelphia was caught on video.

Steven's third, 37 based in Philadelphia, was found dead in a vehicle after the crash.

According to Druitt's family, his girlfriend and 9-year-old son Ramses Vazquez were also in the car. The boy's mother told Action News in the days after the crash that Ramse had burned to 90% of his body.

Victim on the ground in the ne -Philly aircraft crash killed

Six people on the plane were also killed, including a child patient and her mother. The captain, co-pilot, a doctor and a paramedic were also killed.

All victims came from Mexico.

The patient, the 11-year-old Valentina Guzmán Murillo, was treated in the Shriner's Children's Hospital in Philadelphia because of a disease that was not slightly treated in Mexico.

Relationships: Northeast Philadelphia aircraft -root victim: what we know about the injured and killed

A monument was built near the town of the Tödliche Nordost aircraft crash Philadelphia, in which 7 dead and 24 others were injured.

A total of 24 people were injured. The wounded are 10-year-old Trey Howard, who was seriously injured by flying rubble.

His father Andre said Action News that Trey covered his little sister to protect her.

Relatives: “Papa, did I save my sister?” Young Philadelphia Aircraft Crash victim asks about the brain surgery

A father remembers Philadelphia's plane crash, in which his 10-year-old son was injured and recovered from Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

Four houses were destroyed, six severe damage and 11 other damage. A total of 366 properties were affected in any way, officials said.

The crash left an 8-foot crater in the Cottman Avenue. The road was opened on the traffic just a few days later, while repairs were underway.

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