floatplane collision north of Seattle kills 1, leaves 9 missing

floatplane collision north of Seattle kills 1, leaves 9 missing


Langley, Washington: The U.S. Coast Guard reported that one person died and nine others, including a toddler, were missing when a floatplane crashed Sunday afternoon in Washington’s Puget Sound.

According to the authorities, all nine individuals remained missing on Monday morning as search efforts continued. The Coast Guard stated in a Twitter update that two aircraft crews and patrol boats continued to scan the seas of Mutiny Bay near Whidbey Island.

The crews of both patrol boats stayed at the area overnight, according to a recent Coast Guard bulletin. Due to FAA constraints, aircraft searches were momentarily suspended but resumed along with boat crews on Monday morning.

#REVISE #

USCG aviation (2 aircraft and personnel) and patrol boat teams (Cutters Osprey and Blue Shark) continue the search for 9 people aboard the seaplane that crashed in Mutiny Bay, Washington. Mutiny Bay, west of Whidbey Island, is the site of ongoing search attempts. #ProtectingThePNW

— USCG Pacific Northwest (@USCGPacificNW) on September 5

According to a news release from the agency, the plane was travelling from Friday Harbor, a famous tourist site in the San Juan Islands, to Renton, a southern Seattle suburb.

Four Coast Guard vessels, a rescue helicopter, and an airplane, together with nearby rescue and law enforcement organizations, participated in the comprehensive search. The Coast Guard announced late Sunday night that two vessels would continue searching during the night and that aviation patrols would resume at first light.

The incident was reported around 15:11 hours.

As of approximately 9 p.m., the Coast Guard reported that one body had been discovered and nine individuals were still missing. The cause of the accident was unknown, according to investigators.

The aircraft crashed in Mutiny Bay off Whidbey Island, approximately 30 miles northwest of Seattle and midway between Friday Harbor and Renton.

The National Transportation Safety Board identified the plane as a single-engine propeller de Havilland DHC-3 Otter.

Floatplanes, which are equipped with pontoons for water landings, are a familiar sight in Puget Sound, an inlet of the Pacific Ocean. There are many daily flights between the Seattle area and the San Juan Islands, a picturesque archipelago northwest of Seattle that attracts visitors from around the globe.

These aircraft, which also fly between Seattle and Vancouver, British Columbia, frequently fly over Seattle and land near the city’s recognizable Space Needle near Lake Washington.

Sunday’s flight was reportedly en route to Renton, which is at the southern point of Lake Washington, about 10 miles southeast of Seattle.

Six persons perished in a midair collision between two tourist planes in Alaska in 2019. The Ketchikan-based floatplanes were returning from excursions of Misty Fjords National Monument with guests from the same cruise liner, the Royal Princess.


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