Louisville, UPS
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A moment of silence was held before Saturday night’s game between No. 14 Louisville and California to honor victims of Tuesday’s crash of a UPS cargo plane at Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport.
Mayor Craig Greenberg said the number of bodies found at the crash site match the number of missing persons reports.
The ashes have settled over the charred Louisville neighborhood where nine people remain missing and families cling to hope as investigators comb through the wreckage of Tuesday’s fatal UPS cargo plane crash.
The crash near Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport marked the deadliest accident in UPS Airlines history. Here's what we know now.
Nine people remain missing after a UPS plane departing Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport in Kentucky on Tuesday crashed, killing at least 12 people.
Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport in Kentucky has reopened, but multiple taxiways remain closed, according to the FAA, after a fiery UPS plane crash on Nov. 4 left at least nine people dead and several injured. Anyone scheduled to arrive or depart in Louisville have been advised by airport authorities to check their flight status.
After the UPS plane crash that killed at least 13 people, NTSB released drone video footage of the crash site. See the full impact to businesses.
The power had just gone off and the ground was shaking at Grade A Auto Parts when the owner received a panicked video call from his chief financial officer. On his screen, CEO Sean Garber watched a “huge fireball” engulf the Louisville,