Sheriff: 1 Body Recovered From Texas Cargo Plane Crash Site

Sheriff: 1 Body Recovered From Texas Cargo Plane Crash Site
The scene of a cargo plane crash on Feb. 23, 2019 in Trinity Bay, just north of Galveston Bay and the Gulf of Mexico in Texas. (KRIV FOX 26 via AP)
The Associated Press
2/24/2019
Updated:
2/25/2019

ANAHUAC, Texas—Search and recovery crews have recovered one body and the search continued Sunday for two more at the site where a Boeing 767 cargo plane crashed into a coastal bay near Houston with three people aboard.

The Chambers County Sheriff’s Office said on Facebook that the body was recovered late Saturday from Trinity Bay, just off the waterfront of the small town of Anahuac. Three crew members were on board Atlas Air flight 3591, being operated for Amazon, when it crashed Saturday afternoon.

Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorne said Saturday that the plane ”went in nose first ” and that it was “probably a crash that nobody would survive.”

The search resumed Sunday for the remaining two crew members and the all-important “black box” flight recorder that could offer clues to what caused the crash. Civilian volunteers mobilized small boats to help with the search of the northern tip of Trinity Bay called Jack’s Pocket.

Emergency personnel work at the scene of a plane crash site in Trinity Bay in Anahuac, Texas on Feb. 23, 2019. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via AP)
Emergency personnel work at the scene of a plane crash site in Trinity Bay in Anahuac, Texas on Feb. 23, 2019. (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via AP)

Jason Campbell and two other Anahuac boat mechanics were among the civilian boaters who checked debris for any identification or cellphones on Saturday. What they found was grim.

“Pieces of bodies, nothing bigger than ... you know,” Campbell told KHOU-TV. “It’s obvious it’s human pieces but nothing bigger than you can hold in your hands.”

The jumbo jet had departed from Miami and was likely moments from landing at Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston when witnesses said it crashed nose-first into the bay about 35 miles east of Houston.

Dave Clark, senior vice president of Worldwide Operations at Amazon, said: “Our thoughts and prayers are with the flight crew, their families and friends along with the entire team at Atlas Air during this terrible tragedy. We appreciate the first responders who worked urgently to provide support.”

Witnesses told emergency personnel that the twin-engine plane “went in nose first,” leaving a debris field three-quarters of a mile long in Trinity Bay, Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorne said.

The cargo plane made a steep descent shortly before 12:45 p.m. from 6,525 feet to 3,025 feet in 30 seconds, according to tracking data from FlightAware.com.

The flight was being operated for Amazon by Atlas Air, according to a statement from the airline. “Our main priority at this time is caring for those affected and we will ensure we do all we can to support them now and in the days and weeks to come,” Atlas Air said in a statement.

Witnesses said they heard the plane’s engines surging and that the craft turned sharply before falling into a nosedive, Hawthorne said.

Aerial footage shows emergency personnel walking along a spit of marshland flecked by debris that extends into the water.

Hawthorne told the Houston Chronicle late Saturday afternoon that police had found human remains at the site of the crash.

Investigators have also recovered parts of the plane, he said. “There’s everything from cardboard boxes to women’s clothing and bed sheets,” Hawthorne said.

The FBI also confirmed in a statement that human remains have been found at the scene and that there were unlikely to be any survivors, adding that crisis management personnel and evidence response teams were assisting local, state, and federal authorities with the investigation.

The largest piece from the Boeing 767 that police have recovered is 50 feet long, Hawthorne told the newspaper.

The sheriff said recovering pieces of the plane and its black box containing flight data records will be difficult in muddy marshland that extends to about 5 feet deep in the area. Air boats are needed to access the area.

The plane had departed from Miami and was likely only minutes away from landing at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston.

The Federal Aviation Administration issued an alert after officials lost radar and radio contact with Atlas Air Flight 3591 when it was about 30 miles southeast of the airport, FAA spokesman Lynn Lunsford said.

Air traffic controllers in Houston tried at least twice to contact but the plane but received no response.

After losing contact, then they asked a United Airlines pilot if he had seen “ground contact”—wreckage—to his right or behind him, according to recordings of the conversation. “That’s a negative,” he said.

They also asked a Mesa Airlines pilot: “See if you can make ground contact. We are looking for a lost aircraft ... it’s a heavy Boeing 767,” meaning it’s a big, two-aisle plane.

“No ground contact from here,” the Mesa pilot said.

The Coast Guard dispatched boats and at least one helicopter to assist in the search for survivors. A dive team with the Texas Department of Public Safety will be tasked with finding the black box, Hawthorne said.

Trinity Bay is just north of Galveston Bay and the Gulf of Mexico.

FAA investigators arrived at the scene shortly after the crash with authorities from the National Transportation Safety Board, which will lead the investigation.