Twin-engine aircraft had just taken off from Essendon airport when it ploughed into a shopping centre

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

A plane that crashed into a shopping centre near Essendon airport in Melbourne, killing four US tourists and their Australian pilot, had a “catastrophic engine failure” shortly after takeoff, police have said.

The twin-engine aircraft, which issued a mayday shortly after leaving the airport about 9am on Tuesday, was taking the tourists to King Island to play golf.

“The pilot unfortunately attempted to return to Essendon but has crashed into the DFO at Essendon Fields,” a police assistant commissioner, Stephen Leane, told reporters.

Leane said none of the staff at Direct Factory Outlets – which was not yet open to the public – had been injured. “Looking at the fireball, it is incredibly lucky that no one was at the back of those stores or in the car park of the stores that no one was even hurt,” he said.

The US embassy has confirmed that four American citizens were killed.

The state premier, Daniel Andrews, said it was the worst civil aviation disaster in Victoria for 30 years, and commended the work of emergency service personnel who attended the scene.



Essendon airport and the DFO centre have been closed to allow for investigations by the coroner and the Australian Transport Safety Bureau. Only police, ambulance and firefighting planes, which are based at Essendon, were given clearance to fly. Debris-strewn lanes of the Tullamarine freeway were also closed to traffic.

Authorities confirmed earlier that the plane was a commercial charter flight bound for the island in the Bass Strait. The Beechcraft Super King Airplane, owned by Myjet, had been hired by Corporate and Leisure Travel.

The state’s emergency management commissioner, Craig Lapsley, said psychological support would be provided to emergency services personnel and witnesses to the crash, saying the government had “learned a lot from Bourke Street” about managing trauma. Counselling services were offered after last month’s Bourke Street tragedy, which led to the deaths of six people.



Mïkey Cahîll (@JoeyLightbulb) .@theheraldsun nasty stuff. I saw a yellow and red fiery ball explode then black plumes of smoke pic.twitter.com/gDTQESftMv

The fireball sent one of the aircraft’s wheels on to the Tullamarine freeway, Fairfax Radio reported, and police closed the Tullamarine and Calder freeways as a plume of black smoke covered the area.

Witnesses said on Twitter they had seen a large explosion followed by a plume of black smoke.



A caller to ABC Melbourne, Jason, said he was in a taxi when he looked out the window and saw the plane.

“I saw this plane coming in really low and fast. It went just behind the barriers so I couldn’t see the impact but when it hit the building there was a massive fireball,” he told ABC 774.

“I could feel the heat through the window of the taxi, and then a wheel, it looked like a plane wheel, bounced on the road and hit the front of the taxi as we were driving along. We kept driving and there was big fireball behind us.”

Samantha Amjadali (@sam_amjadali) Hearing reports of a plane crash in Essendon? Lots of smoke to be seen. pic.twitter.com/gRkcWaLE0y

A woman who dropped her daughter off at the Spotlight store in the shopping complex on Tuesday morning told Fairfax Radio her daughter had said the store was on fire but that all staff were unharmed.

The opposition leader, Bill Shorten, tweeted his condolences.

Bill Shorten (@billshortenmp) Horrific scenes from Essendon. Hard to fathom such an ordinary morning could turn so tragic.

Debris from the crash was found up to 100 metres away, Seven News reported.

NickMcCallum7 (@NickMcCallum7) Burnt insulation blanket in park, across freeway about 100 metres from DFO where light plane crashed. 6pm #7NewsMelb pic.twitter.com/tvoB3GwdMI

Aviation safety investigators have begun examining the wreckage. The Australian Transport Safety Bureau has sent four investigators – one from Brisbane and three from Canberra – to examine the crash site.

“It will be very difficult because the aircraft was carrying a great amount of fuel, because it was starting a flight, so there’s a lot of gas and a lot of fire,” said a University of South Australia aviation lecturer, Dr Douglas Drury.

Drury said the King Air plane was highly regarded by pilots: “The King Air is a very robust aircraft. It’s been in operation for a number of years, flown thousands of hours around the globe. It’s a trusted aircraft.”

Residents of King Island have been left shaken by the crash. “Because we all fly, it shakes us,” said the mayor, Duncan McFie.

He said golf tourism was “critically important” to the island of fewer than 2,000 people, and in the past 12 to 18 months, with the opening of two new courses, it had become an international golfing destination.