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Tragedy struck a Florida neighborhood on Sunday morning when a small aircraft crashed into a resident’s yard, claiming the life of the pilot. The incident sent flames and thick smoke billowing into the sky, according to local authorities.
The ill-fated Cessna 401B had taken off from Tampa North Aero Park with only the pilot on board. It was approximately 8:35 a.m. when the plane crashed into a residential area in Wesley Chapel, as reported by the National Transportation Safety Board and CBS News.
Details remain unclear regarding the “unknown circumstances” that led to the twin-engine aircraft’s descent. Upon impact, the plane burst into flames, causing some damage to the nearby home, according to WTSP.
The pilot, whose identity has not been released, perished in the crash, officials confirmed.
Footage captured by a Ring Camera belonging to a neighbor, Christina Galbiati, depicted a towering column of dark smoke rising ominously from the backyard of the affected home. Galbiati shared on social media that she was enjoying her morning coffee when the plane unexpectedly plummeted from the sky.
Galbiati posted on social media that she had been drinking her morning coffee when she witnessed the plane suddenly fall from the sky.
She said the “hero” pilot appear to intentionally nose-dive away from the house.
“This morning while drinking my morning coffee, I witnessed a plane crash,” Galbiati wrote in a Facebook post.
“The boys saw the plane flying low from the backyard, and I heard it come over my head, purposely turn and then nose dive. It was a white and blue plane with a couple of numbers on it,” she wrote.
“The pilot was alone (I think) and didn’t make it, but he was a hero as I saw him go straight down on purpose to avoid the house it was near.”
Alarming images of the wreckage released by Pasco County firefighters also showed debris from the plane lit ablaze as it scattered across the yard full of palm trees.
The NTSB said in a statement to The Post that an investigator is en route to the scene and will examine the aircraft before removing it to a “secure facility” for further evaluation.
The Federal Aviation Authority did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.