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The death toll from the Louisville UPS plane crash has risen to nine

Officials from Louisville and Kentucky said that the death toll has now reached nine. The UPS cargo plane crashed into a fireball just moments after taking off in Louisville on Tuesday.

The National Transportation Safety Board investigators will be at the scene on Wednesday to start the process of determining what went wrong after the MD-11 cargo aircraft, which is 34 years old, caught fire at 5:13 pm. ET on Tuesday, and then crashed.

The crash site was reported by Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg as having nine bodies. Andy Beshear, Governor of Kentucky, said via social media that it is possible that there will be more deaths. Officials reported that 11 victims were taken to hospital on Tuesday.

Officials said that the airport international in Louisville, Kentucky reopened for air traffic on Wednesday morning, but the runway where the accident occurred is expected to be closed for at least another 10 days.

UPS announced Tuesday that it had stopped package sorting at its airport facility. The company didn't say whether it resumed its package sorting on Wednesday.

The plane had enough fuel for an eight-and-a-half-hour flight to Honolulu. UPS reported that it had a three-person crew. Officials said that none of the crew survived.

The crash was the first UPS cargo aircraft to occur since August 2013 when an Airbus plane crashed on the landing approach at Birmingham International Airport, Alabama. Both crew members were killed.

After the crash, thick black smoke rose into the evening skies from several buildings that were on fire in an industrial area just beyond the runway.

A person who was briefed in the matter, and showed video images of debris on the airfield, said that the key question for the investigators was why it appeared as if one engine had separated from the aircraft before the crash. (Reporting and editing by Andrew Heavens; Reporting by David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)