Officials in California have confirmed multiple fatalities after a private plane crashed into a San Diego neighbourhood this afternoon.
Assistant Fire Department Chief Dan Eddy said that they will be investigating whether the plane hit a power line.
No one on the ground was injured, he said, with the fatalities among those who were on board the flight.
San Diego police and fire officials said the plane could hold eight to 10 people, but they do not yet know how many were on board.
“There are more than one fatality that we found so far, but we’re waiting to get the registered numbers that were on the plane itself,” said Mr Eddy.


“When it hit the street, as the jet fuel went down it took out every single car that was on both sides of the street,” he added.
“You can see that every singe car was burning down both sides of the street.”
San Diego officials haven’t released details about the plane that crashed but said it was a flight coming in from the Midwest.
Mr Eddy said it was very foggy at the time the private plane crashed.
“You could barely see in front of you,” he said.
The Cessna 550 aircraft crashed at about 3.45am near the Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

“The number of people on board is unknown at this time,” the FAA said in a statement.
The plane can carry six to eight people.
The FAA said the National Transportation Safety Board will lead the investigation.
In October 2021, a twin-engine plane ploughed into a San Diego suburb, killing the pilot and a UPS delivery driver on the ground and burning homes.
It was preparing to land at the airport.