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Saturday, December 20, 2025 at 12:23 PM
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Texas Briefly

ROUND ROCK (AP) — A small twin-engine plane appeared to have an engine fire and was flying low and erratically before crashing into a Central Texas field, federal officials said Friday.

ROUND ROCK (AP) — A small twin-engine plane appeared to have an engine fire and was flying low and erratically before crashing into a Central Texas field, federal officials said Friday.

The Cessna 320 crashedat about 1 p.m. on July 1 near Round Rock, killing its pilot and lone occupant.

In a preliminary report issued Friday, the National Transportation Safety Board said the aircraft took off from an airport in Lago Vista, Texas, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of Austin and flew 45 miles east before making a north turn, where its flight track data link ceased.

The aircraft appeared to be headed back to the Lago Vista airport when a woman driving near Round Rock, about 30 miles (49 kilometers) west of where the plane turned, said she saw the plane flying low and erratically with its left engine aflame. It crashed and burned in a wooded area near gravel pits just west of Interstate 35.


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