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A Brutal Crash in Missouri Just Claimed 12 Lives, Exposing a Lethal Gap in FAA Oversight That Regulators Have Ignored for Years

Will the FAA finally act?

A single-engine plane carrying 12 people crashed moments after takeoff from Butler Memorial Airport in Missouri on June 14, 2026, killing everyone on board and marking the deadliest skydiving plane accident in over two decades. The tragedy has reignited a long-standing debate about the Federal Aviation Administration’s lax (FAA) oversight of skydiving operations, a gap that regulators have been warned about for years but have done little to fix.

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According to CNN, the plane, operated by Skydive Kansas City, had just lifted off around 11:35 AM when it made a sharp left turn and plummeted into a field about 300 yards from the runway. Witnesses described the aircraft barely clearing the trees before it crashed and burst into flames. Emergency responders arrived quickly, but the fire and impact left no survivors. Nine of the victims were experienced skydivers, while the other two were preparing for tandem jumps. 

The crash is the deadliest in Missouri since 2004 and the worst skydiving plane accident since a 2019 incident in Hawaii that killed 11 people. The National Transportation Safety Board has launched an investigation, but a final report could take up to two years. NTSB Vice Chairman Michael Graham said most of the team is already on site, though some members are delayed due to logistical issues tied to the World Cup in Kansas City and weather complications. 

The NTSB and FAA are investigating the incident

The FAA has also dispatched officials to assist. For now, the cause remains a mystery. Witnesses reported seeing the plane make a sudden left turn, but it’s unclear whether the pilot intentionally maneuvered or if the aircraft lost power and stalled. 

Dennis Jacobs, acting manager, Butler Memorial Airport, said he believes the plane was struggling to stay airborne. “It never reached an altitude of 100-200 feet. It was barely over the trees,” he said. Jacobs speculated the pilot may have been attempting to land on a nearby highway when the plane stalled and crashed nose-first.

The aircraft, a Pacific Aerospace 750XL manufactured in 2010, is a popular model for skydiving operations and can carry up to 17 passengers. According to FAA records, it had completed two short flights earlier that morning before the fatal crash. The plane is registered to SkyHi Aero, a Tennessee-based company, though CNN has not yet received a response from them. 

Aviation analysts noted the plane’s engine is generally reliable, but potential issues like water in the fuel or a clogged filter could have contributed to the crash. The plane undergoes detailed inspections every 100 hours of flight time, but experts say that may not be enough to catch all potential problems.

This crash is far from an isolated incident

In May 2024, a skydiving plane near the same airport lost power, forcing all seven occupants to jump before it crashed. No one was killed in that incident, but it underscored the risks of skydiving flights. Over the past decade, there have been eight fatal skydiving-related plane crashes in the U.S., resulting in 25 deaths. 

The 2019 Hawaii crash, which killed 11 people, was the deadliest until Sunday’s tragedy. In that case, the NTSB determined the pilot’s aggressive takeoff maneuver caused an accelerated stall, leading to a loss of control. Investigators also found the pilot had received only one hour of specialized training over two days before the flight. 

A former pilot at the company told investigators the training was minimal, focusing only on basic tasks like starting the engine, taxiing, and landing. “They go up, they go down… They get as many jumps as the weather and daylight permit,” said aviation attorney Gary Robb, who has handled multiple skydiving accident cases.

The Hawaii crash also revealed serious maintenance issues. The plane involved had a twisted left wing from a previous accident that was never properly repaired, which the NTSB said likely caused the wing to stall first. Robb, who represented victims of a 2006 skydiving plane crash in Missouri, told CNN the lack of strict oversight creates a temptation for operators to cut corners. 

In that case, a supplier of aftermarket parts was found liable for selling defective propeller blades, leading to a $52.5 million settlement for the victims’ families. “They used inexpensive parts, and it caused the failure in that case,” Robb said.

Skydiving planes operate under FAA rules 

These rules, known as Part 91, are far less stringent than those governing commercial airlines. While skydiving companies face some regulations, most focus on equipment handling rather than pilot training or aircraft maintenance. The NTSB has repeatedly urged the FAA to tighten these rules, arguing that paying passengers deserve the same safety standards as those on commercial flights. 

In 2008, the NTSB formally recommended that Part 91 regulations be updated to ensure pilots are properly trained for skydiving operations, but the FAA rejected the proposal, citing lower accident rates compared to other private flights. The United States Parachute Association, which lobbies for the industry, has also pushed back against stricter rules, arguing that skydiving is inherently risky and that fatalities have declined over the decades.

Jennifer Homendy, now chair of the NTSB, was a board member during the Hawaii investigation. At the time, she criticized the Federal Aviation Administration’s inaction. Six years later, little has changed. Homendy’s frustration is shared by other safety advocates, including former NTSB investigator Jeff Guzzetti, who said the FAA’s slow bureaucracy makes it difficult to implement new rules. 

“It takes a long time for the FAA to work through the bureaucracy and justify new rules that could cause businesses to go out of business,” Guzzetti said. He added that the FAA must balance safety concerns with the economic impact on small operators, which often lack the resources to comply with stricter regulations.

(Featured image: rouwert on Pixabay)

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A newsroom lifer who has wrestled countless stories into submission, Terrina is drawn to politics, culture, animals, music and offbeat tales. Fueled by unending curiosity and masterful exasperation, her power tools of choice are wit, warmth and precision.