Re: 5 Die As Plane Hits Milan Building

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Well it could be a Twin Commander but that clearly is NOT a 112TC...

Mike Gammon

----- Original Message -----
From: "W Wilson" <wlw-jr@att.net>
To: <AIRLINE@LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2002 5:09 PM
Subject: Re: 5 Die As Plane Hits Milan Building


> From Piper to Rockwell.....
> A twin Rockwell Commander 112TC?
> ...I guess Italian reporting is just as bad as here in the US.  Not to
> mention this is also an AP report.
>
> Walter
> DCA
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "W Wilson" <wlw-jr@att.net>
> To: <AIRLINE@LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU>
> Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2002 17:04
> Subject: 5 Die As Plane Hits Milan Building
>
>
> > By ANDREW DAMPF
> > MILAN, Italy (AP) - A small plane, in flames and sending a distress
> signal,
> > smashed into the tallest skyscraper in Italy's financial capital
Thursday,
> > raising fears of a Sept. 11-type terror attack. At least five people
were
> > killed and 60 injured, but the Italian government said it was probably
an
> > accident.
> >
> > The aircraft punched through the 25th floor of the slim Pirelli
building,
> > gutting two floors and starting a fire that sent smoke pouring out into
> the
> > clear blue sky over downtown Milan. Emergency workers helped bloodied
men
> in
> > business suits while firefighters worked to put out the blaze.
> >
> > "I heard something like the engine of a plane dying out, and then I
heard
> a
> > terrible explosion," said Raffaele Taccogna, who was tending bar at the
> > nearby Atlantic Hotel. "I certainly thought of the September attacks in
> the
> > United States," he said. "It really looked like the same thing."
> >
> > The pilot - who was on a 20-minute flight from Locarno, Switzerland, to
> > Milan - issued a distress signal and reported problems with the plane's
> > landing gear moments before plowing into the 30-story building at 5:50
> p.m.,
> > Milan police officer Celerissimo De Simone said.
> >
> >
> > One witness, Fabio Sunik, said the plane was on fire before it crashed.
> The
> > plane did not try to change course, "but just went straight in," said
> Sunik,
> > a sports journalist. "Then I saw rubble falling from the building."
> >
> > Milan's main train station, about 200 yards away from the skyscraper,
was
> > evacuated for security reasons, and no trains were running from there.
> > After-hours trading was suspended on the Milan stock market, which was
> > already closed for the day.
> >
> > President Bush was quickly notified of the collision, press secretary
Ari
> > Fleischer said. The FBI was assisting in the investigation.
> >
> > In Washington, a senior Bush administration official, speaking on
> condition
> > of anonymity, said Italian officials had told the United States that a
> > mechanical problem not related to terrorism caused the crash.
> >
> > Interior Minister Claudio Scajola told reporters in Rome that "initial
> > reports point to an accident."
> >
> > "We believe it isn't a terrorist attack," said police Sgt. Vincenzo
Curto,
> > reached at Carabinieri headquarters.
> >
> > Some 1,300 people work in the building, which houses local government
> > offices, but it was not known how many where still there when the crash
> took
> > place - not long after working hours ended.
> >
> > The five dead were the pilot, two workers in the building and two
> > passers-by, said Carlo Leo, a civil defense official. Rescue workers
found
> a
> > survivor, three hours after the crash, on the 25th floor, where one of
the
> > dead was found.
> >
> > The pilot, believed to be the only one in the plane, was identified by
> > police as Luigi Fasulo, a resident of Pregassona, Switzerland who was
> > thought to be in his 60s.
> >
> > The plane was a Rockwell Commander, said Patrick Herr of the Swiss air
> > traffic control office SKYGUIDE. Swiss television identified the model
as
> a
> > Commander 112TC, a twin-engine craft with a 35-foot wingspan not
produced
> > since 1979.
> >
> > A woman who worked on the eighth floor said she saw 10 people who were
> > bleeding. Emergency workers in bright orange uniforms helped a man walk
> from
> > the scene, his shirt splattered with blood and his hand covering a gash
on
> > his head.
> >
> > An unspecified number of people were rescued from elevators in the
> building,
> > the Italian news service ANSA said. Some 20 people were taken to
Fatebene
> > Fratelli hospital, officials there said. Among them was a woman with
> serious
> > burns.
> >
> > The collision damaged a building seen as the symbol of Milan, the heart
of
> > Italy's financial and industrial world. Built in the 1950s, the
> > 415-foot-high building once housed the headquarters of the tire giant
> > Pirelli.
> >
> > Smoke continued to pour out of the building for three hours after the
> crash,
> > though firefighters quickly controlled the blaze. A large section of an
> > entire floor lost its walls. Smoke and liquid poured from the gash in
one
> > side of the building.
> >
> > Luccheta Antonio, 52, a barber down the block, said: "It was shocking.
The
> > windows shook and the mirrors fell to the floor."
> >
> > Police cordoned off the area as people gawked at the skyscraper.
> >
> > Senate President Marcello Pera said initially that it appeared the crash
> was
> > "most probably" a terrorist attack. But later, Pera's spokesman said the
> > Interior Minister had advised that apparently was not the case.
> >
> > The State Department had warned of possible terrorist attacks in Milan
and
> > three other Italian cities over the Easter weekend. But U.S. authorities
> had
> > no recent intelligence suggesting any kind of terrorist attack was
> imminent
> > in Milan, said a U.S. official, also speaking on the condition of
> anonymity.
> >
>

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