Four people, including a child, were killed when a helicopter crashed into a radio tower in Houston on Sunday.
The crash happened just before 8 p.m. when a private aircraft struck a radio tower in Houston’s Second Ward, Houston police said.
No homes or structures were impacted except for the radio tower, police said, but a fire that erupted from the crash spanned two to three blocks.
Houston Fire Department officials extinguished the fire after the crash.
The helicopter was operating as an air tour flight, according to the National Transportation Safety Board. All four people onboard were killed, but no one on the ground was injured, officials said.
At a press conference on Monday, Brian Rutt, an air safety investigator with the NTSB, confirmed that the helicopter, with the tail number N881KE, did not have a flight data recorder. He said that it was not required to have one, and the NTSB is searching for any other devices that might have that data.
He also stated that while the NTSB is on the scene, it is focusing on the wreckage, and any information about the deceased will come from the medical examiner’s office.
An investigation by Houston authorities, the National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration is ongoing.