At least six people died after two World War II-era planes collided with each other during an airshow in Dallas, officials said Sunday.
Video footage showed the two planes hitting each other in mid-air before both crashed at the Wings Over Dallas event Saturday. A Bell P-63 KingCobra and a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress were involved in the collision, officials said.
The Dallas County Medical Examiner confirmed there “are a total of 6 fatalities from yesterday’s Wings over Dallas air show incident,” Jenkins also wrote Sunday.
Leah Block, a spokesperson for Commemorative Air Force, told ABC News on Saturday that she believed there were five crew members on the B-17 and one person on board the P-63.
Commemorative Air Force President Hank Coates said Saturday he couldn’t yet confirm the number of deaths.
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbot took to Twitter to comment on the incident.
“Planes collide during air show at Dallas Executive Airport. The Texas Dept. of Public Safety, Texas Division of Emergency Management, and the Texas Dept. of Transportation are assisting local officials in responding to this tragedy,” the governor wrote on the platform.
Anthony Montoya saw the two planes collide. “I just stood there. I was in complete shock and disbelief,” said Montoya, 27, who attended the air show with a friend. “Everybody around was gasping. Everybody was bursting into tears. Everybody was in shock.”
Victoria Yeager, the widow of famed Air Force test pilot Chuck Yeager and herself a pilot, was also at the show. She didn’t see the collision but did see the burning wreckage. “It was pulverized,” said Yeager, 64, who lives in Fort Worth.
“We were just hoping they had all gotten out, but we knew they didn’t,” she said of those on board.