Advertisement

3 dead near Atlanta after planes collide trying to land at same time, officials say

One of the planes was registered to a private citizen and the other to a nearby flight school.

By Doug G. Ware

Three people were killed Wednesday in a midair collision over West Georgia Regional Airport, about 45 miles west of Altanta. Map by Google

CARROLL COUNTY, Ga., Sept. 7 (UPI) -- Three people were killed Wednesday when two small airplanes collided over the Georgia countryside west of Atlanta while trying to land, authorities said.

The single-engine planes, a Diamond DA20C1 and a Beech F33A, crashed into each other in the sky over the West Georgia Regional Airport at about 11 a.m. EDT Wednesday, Atlanta's CBS 46 reported.

Advertisement

The airport is located in Carroll County about 45 miles west of Atlanta.

The Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the crash.

One of the planes was registered to a private citizen and the other to a nearby flight school in Newnan, Ga., CBS 46 reported.

RECOMMENDED Sunday: Two dead after single-engine plane crashes into Texas river

Witnesses and emergency personnel said that the planes appeared to try and land at the same time.

All three dead are adults -- two men and a woman, Atlanta's WXIA-TV reported -- but they were not immediately identified.

West Georgia Regional Airport is a "non-controlled" facility, meaning flights in and out of the airport are not monitored by air traffic controllers in a control tower. Instead, the pilots of flights there are responsible for navigating air traffic themselves.

Advertisement

"At non-controlled airports, just because there's no control tower, it doesn't mean it's unsafe. Safety of flying is responsibility of the pilot," former Delta Air Lines pilot Joe Fagendes told CBS 46.

No one on the ground was hurt.

Video: WSB-TV Atlanta

Latest Headlines