Passenger lands plane in Martha’s Vineyard after pilot falls ill
- 79-year-old pilot suffers medical emergency, crashed near Martha’s Vineyard
- Crash leads to hard landing outside runway, breaking aircraft’s left wing
- Pilot in serious condition; passenger who took over controls not injured
A passenger of a small airplane took the controls and crash-landed near a runway at Martha’s Vineyard Airport in Massachusetts after the pilot suffered a medical emergency, police said.
The crash happened Saturday afternoon in West Tisbury, Massachusetts. The 79-year-old male pilot suffered the emergency during the plane’s final approach, Massachusetts State Police said.
State police said the crash “resulted in a hard landing outside the runway that caused the aircraft’s left wing to break in half.” Authorities did not name either person on the plane and said both were transported to a hospital.
The pilot was then flown to a Boston hospital in life-threatening condition. The female passenger was uninjured and released from a local hospital, police said.
The 2006 Piper Meridian airplane departed from Westchester County, New York, earlier Saturday afternoon. The pilot and passenger are Connecticut residents, police said.
State police are investigating the crash, National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration. An FAA spokesperson said the NTSB is in charge of the investigation.
The aircraft was removed and taken to a secure location at the airport and the crash scene was cleared, state police said.
The crash happened almost 24 years to the day after a Piper crash killed John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette and her sister Lauren Bessette off Martha’s Vineyard.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.