US: 4 die when medical transport plane crashes in Navajo Nation in north Arizona
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Smoke and flames rise after a medical transport plane crashed near the airport in Chinle, Arizona on August 5, 2025. Photo: AP/PTI

US: 4 die in medical transport plane crash at Navajo Nation in north Arizona

The plane, carrying two pilots and two health care providers, was en route to pick up a patient from a hospital in the Navajo Nation


In a tragic development, four people died when a small medical transport plane crashed and caught fire on Tuesday (August 5) on the Navajo Nation in northern Arizona, killing four people, the tribe said in a statement.

A Beechcraft King Air 300 from the CSI Aviation company left Albuquerque, New Mexico, with two pilots and two health care providers, according to the Federal Aviation Administration and CSI Aviation. It crashed in the early afternoon near the airport in Chinle, about 300 miles (483 kilometres) northeast of Phoenix.

“They were trying to land there and unfortunately something went wrong,” district Police Commander Emmett Yazzie said.

Cause of crash

The crew was planning to pick up a patient who needed critical care from the federal Indian Health Service hospital in Chinle, said Sharen Sandoval, director of the Navajo Department of Emergency Management. She said the plan was to return to Albuquerque. The patient's location and condition were not known Tuesday evening.

Also read: Small plane crashes after takeoff at London Southend Airport

Tribal authorities began receiving reports at 12.44 pm of black smoke at the airport, Sandoval said. The cause of the crash wasn't known, the tribe said. The National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA are investigating.

Deaths confirmed

CSI Aviation officials “with great sadness” confirmed the deaths in an emailed statement and extended condolences to the families, friends and loved ones of the people killed. Their names haven't been released.

The company is cooperating with the investigation, according to the statement.

Heartbroken

Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren said in a social media post that he was heartbroken to learn of the crash.

“These were people who dedicated their lives to saving others, and their loss is felt deeply across the Navajo Nation,” he said.

Medical transports by air from the Navajo Nation are common because most hospitals are small and do not offer advanced or trauma care. The Chinle airport is one of a handful of airports that the tribe owns and operates on the vast 27,000 square-mile (70,000 square-kilometer) reservation that stretches into Arizona, New Mexico and Utah -- the largest land base of any Native American tribe.

In January, a medical transport plane crashed in Philadelphia, killing eight people. The National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the crash, has said the voice recorder on that plane was not working.

(With inputs from agencies)

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