Small plane crashes into Austin business building

February 19, 2010 by admin · 1 Comment · 925 views
Filed under: Crimes, Disasters 

A small airplane appears to get been intentionally crashed right into a suburban Austin, Texas., business building that contains a local branch of the Internal Revenue Service, unnamed federal officials told the Associated Press.

Authorities in Austin sought to quell any concerns the city was under attack or in any more danger, saying in a news briefing Thursday afternoon the incident was contained.

“Categorically … there is no cause for concern from a law-enforcement or a terrorism perspective,” Austin Police Chief Chief Art Acevedo said at the briefing.

Authorities reported that until now two people had been taken into the hospital with injuries and that one person was unaccounted for. The building hadn’t been completely extinguished even as the news briefing was under way, and officials said the search for any casualties would continue as first responders gained access tomore of it.

Employees from several US government agencies – such as the Internal Revenue Service – work there. Early news reports indicate that the man suspected of piloting the aircraft may have been targeting the IRS or, at least, the federal government.

One eyewitness reported the aircraft was flying low above nearby apartment buildings about 10 a.m. Thursday local time before colliding with the building, sending a large fireball into the air. He told a local CBS reporter the plane was operating “smooth as could be” just before flying in to the seven-story business building.

Other witnesses reported the aircraft appeared to accelerate before hitting the building, which is about 15 miles from the nearest airfield.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which has a satellite office in a nearby building in the office complex, said Thursday morning that it was aiding in the investigation but that it was “too early to make any determination” on the nature of the crash.

But, according into the Austin Statesman, one Federal Aviation Administration official called the incident an apparent “criminal act.” If that is the case, the FBI would be part with the investigation.

CNN reported that federal officials said the pilot, who it identified as Joseph Andrew Stack, set his house on fire before flying to Austin. Mr. Stack, according to officials who spoke with CNN, took off from an airfield north of Austin without filing a flight plan with aviation officials.

The Austin Statesman uncovered online what appears to be a long letter from Mr. Stack. It begins: “If you’re reading this, you’re no doubt asking yourself, ‘Why did this have to happen?’ The simple truth is that it is complicated and has been coming for a long time.”

Chief Acevedo said reports the plane was stolen were inaccurate and called the law enforcement efforts under way a “fluid investigation.” He would not comment on the identity of the pilot or whether the crash was intentional.

Immediately after the crash, two F-16 jets from Ellington Field in Houston were scrambled as a precaution, a spokesman for NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) told ABC News.

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  1. [...] Since an airplane hit an Austin, Texas, business building Thursday morning, bits of information have started to emerge about Joseph Andrew Stack, the man believed to happen to be its pilot. [...]



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