One person, who was injured after a small plane crashed into a power transmission tower in Montgomery Village, Maryland, Sunday evening and then dangled in the wires for several hours, has been released from the hospital.
Montgomery County officials gave an update on the plane crash Monday afternoon.
One person remains hospitalized after the crash, which knocked out power for more than 85,000 customers Sunday night.
Authorities have previously identified the pilot as 66-year-old Patrick Merkle and the passenger as 66-year-old Janet Williams, of Louisiana.
Montgomery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein said he could not say who, among the two, was still hospitalized.
The cause of the crash is still unknown.
The small plane, a Mooney Mike 20P single-engine plane, crashed into the power transmission tower about 5:30 p.m. Sunday, becoming “embedded” into the tower, Goldstein said, and tangled up in power lines about 100 feet in the air.
Montgomery County Fire spokesman Pete Piringer told reporters it was the pilot who made the first 911 call from a cellphone while the plane was suspended in the air.
Officials said 911 call-takers remained in “constant contact” with the occupants over the entirety of the nearly eight-hour ordeal, calling the occupants every 30 minutes for a check-in in an effort to preserve their cellphone batteries.
Piringer described the occupants as being “banged up” but OK enough to communicate with first responders.
The rescue took several hours.
Crews first had to de-energize power lines and ground any residual electricity. Donna Cooper, regional president of Pepco, the power company, said it appeared the plane’s propellers came into contact with the wires but that the plane quickly lodged into the tower.
Shortly after midnight, both occupants were safely taken out of the plane using cranes.
Officials acknowledged the rescue was a “very deliberate and time-consuming” process and was nerve-wracking to the occupants.
“They were anxious. They were concerned about the stability of the aircraft,” Goldstein said. “They were disoriented to the severity of, or the complexity of the circumstances.”
By 3 a.m., about two hours after the occupants were rescued, the plane was extricated from the tower and brought safely to the ground.
Capt. Prendi Garcia, with the Maryland State Police, said the plane will remain at the site until it is inspected by National Transportation Safety Board investigators.
State police, along with the Federal Aviation Administration and the NTSB, are all investigating the crash.
The FAA reported that the plane departed from Westchester County Airport in White Plains, New York, on its way to Montgomery County Airpark in Gaithersburg.
The crash caused widespread power outages throughout part of Montgomery County.
Cooper, the Pepco official, said power was restored to all customers by 11:58 p.m.
Montgomery County closed schools Monday, saying it needed the day to make sure all systems were running smoothly after the outage.
Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich praised first responders.
“This is not in anybody’s manual,” he said, adding later, “I’m just happy this hasn’t been a tragedy.”