An employee of Kentucky Truck Parts and Services shows a phone video that was taken after a UPS MD-11 cargo plane crashed on November 5, 2025. Michael Swensen/Getty Images/AFP
Washington: The death toll from a cargo plane crash in the southern US state of Kentucky rose to 12 on Wednesday, with investigators saying the accident was caused by one of the engines catching fire and detaching during takeoff.
The McDonnell Douglas MD-11, operated by package delivery giant UPS and bound for Hawaii, crashed at 5:15 pm (2215 GMT) Tuesday, shortly after departing from Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport.
It exploded into flames as it plowed into businesses adjacent to the airport, killing multiple people on the ground. A three-person crew was aboard.
"I'm deeply saddened to share that the death toll has risen to 12, with several individuals still unaccounted for," Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg said on X.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear called the tragedy "heartbreaking" and "unimaginable."
The National Transportation Safety Board sent teams to Louisville to investigate the accident. NTSB member Todd Inman told reporters that investigators had reviewed closed-circuit airport footage "which shows the left engine detaching from the wing during the take-off roll."
While the plane crashed and destroyed or damaged multiple buildings, leaving a fiery debris field nearly half a mile (800 meters) long, its left engine remained "on the airfield," Inman said.
He added that the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder, known as a plane's black boxes, have been identified and will be sent to Washington for analysis.
Tuesday's crash reportedly was the deadliest in the global package delivery giant's history. Its main hub, Worldport, is in Louisville, where it employs thousands of people.
UPS has halted package sorting operations at its facility.
38,000 gallons of fuel
Video shared by WLKY showed the left engine ablaze as the aircraft tried to lift off.
By early Wednesday, Greenberg said on X that aviation officials had reopened a runway.
Airport spokesman Jonathan Bevin said the cargo flight "went down three miles (five kilometers) south of the airfield" after taking off.
The plane, filled with some 38,000 gallons of fuel for the long-haul flight to Hawaii, narrowly missed a major Ford vehicle assembly plant that employs some 3,000 people, adjacent to the UPS Worldport facility.
"It could have been significantly worse," Beshear said of the tragedy.
Aerial footage of the crash site showed a long trail of debris as firefighters blasted water on the flames, with smoke billowing from the area.
Beshear said the aircraft hit a petroleum recycling facility "pretty directly."
According to NTSB, the plane was built in 1991 and was modified into a cargo aircraft. McDonnell Douglas merged with Boeing in 1996.
Boeing, the US aviation giant which has experienced multiple fatal crashes and safety incidents in the past decade, said in a statement that "we stand ready to support our customer and have offered technical assistance to the NTSB."
UPS travels to more than 200 countries via nearly 2,000 daily flights, with a fleet of 516 aircraft. It owns 294 of those planes and hires the rest.