Poland plane crash: Prosecutors open criminal probe into parachuting crash

Poland plane crash: The Piper Navajo plane was carrying 12 people when it crashed and burst into flames in an orchard Saturday just minutes after taking off from Rudniki Airport in southern Poland.

A firefighter officer examines the crash site of a plane near the village of Topolow in Poland, Saturday. The small Piper Navajo aircraft carrying parachutists crashed and burst into flames shortly after takeoff, killing several people and injuring at least one.

AP

July 8, 2014

Polish prosecutors opened a criminal investigation Sunday into a plane crash that killed 11 people — parachuting instructors and students and the pilot of the plane.

The Piper Navajo plane was carrying 12 people when it crashed and burst into flames in an orchard Saturday just minutes after taking off from Rudniki Airport in southern Poland. One person was also injured. Identities of nine of the victims are pending DNA testing.

Tomasz Ozimek, a spokesman for the prosecutor in Czestochowa, said the criminal investigation aimed to determine whether foul play was involved in the crash.

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Ozimek said investigators were also looking at possible plane malfunction, human error or irregularities in the organization of the training flight.

The incident is Poland's worst civilian plane accident in several years. In 2010, Poland's President Lech Kaczynski and 95 other top officials were killed when the Polish president's plane crashed in Russia.