It began as a quiet evening in Bath Township. Then a private jet flew overhead and quickly crashed through the trees in flames.

Audio from the cockpit captured the terror as the panicked pilot shouted, “Stall, recovery, stall, recovery!” trying to save the plane, but it never recovered.

The Hawker 800XP model jet had just taken off from Battle Creek-WK Kellogg Regional Airport in Michigan. It dropped more than 12,000 feet in less than a minute.

Air traffic controllers tried to reach the pilot. “What is your altitude? Do you read?” one called out, but the radio stayed silent. The dispatcher even asked other pilots nearby to look for smoke. One finally replied, “Yeah, we got burning smoke. Looks like there’s a road just to the south.” That was all anyone could do.

Three people were on board during the crash, and none survived.

Bath Township supervisor Ryan Fewins-Bliss confirmed the d3aths, but the victims’ names haven’t been released yet.


Jet In Trouble Just Minutes After Takeoff


Flight data revealed the aircraft took off shortly before 5 p.m. on Thursday and crashed just miles away.

The twin-engine corporate jet, registered in Mexico and operated by Aereo Lineas del Centro SA, had been grounded for about seven months.

Phil Kroll, aviation director at Kellogg Field, told FOX17 the crew had been testing systems after maintenance. “They were just testing out some systems and that’s when the problem occurred,” he said.

Investigators believe the flight may have been a test run gone tragically wrong. Shortly after takeoff, the plane reportedly experienced a sudden mechanical failure. The cockpit audio painted a haunting picture of the crew’s final moments as they struggled to regain control.

Emergency teams rushed to the wooded crash site, where flames burned through the wreckage as night fell.

As federal officials dig into the cause of Thursday’s crash, the wreckage tells a grim story of a test flight that never made it home.

Investigators are combing through wreckage and audio, searching for answers behind those final, desperate words.