Updated
Updated · KCTV 5 · Jun 15
NTSB Probes Skydive KC Crash That Killed 12, Eyes 30-Day Preliminary Report
Updated
Updated · KCTV 5 · Jun 15

NTSB Probes Skydive KC Crash That Killed 12, Eyes 30-Day Preliminary Report

3 articles · Updated · KCTV 5 · Jun 15

Summary

  • Twelve people died after a Pacific Aerospace 750XL carrying 11 skydivers and a pilot crashed shortly after takeoff Sunday from Butler Memorial Airport and burned, prompting the NTSB’s first public update.
  • NTSB Vice Chairman Michael Graham said investigators have not determined a cause and do not yet know whether the aircraft had a cockpit or flight data recorder; the wreckage is due to be moved Tuesday for further examination.
  • Skydive KC has faced two other recent incidents tied to its aircraft: a 2024 parachute-deployment accident that seriously injured a jumper and a June 2025 maintenance-flight crash onto a hangar roof that remains under investigation.
  • Butler residents, the Red Cross and Code 1 Wellness have mobilized support for families and first responders as the town waits for an initial NTSB report in about 30 days and a final report no sooner than 18 months.

Insights

After years of safety warnings, will this fatal crash finally force regulators to tighten the skydiving industry's lax rules?
Third incident in three years for the same company. Was this a tragic coincidence or a pattern of deadly negligence?