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"It almost knocked me off my ladder," Ruddick said. The other plane looked like it was having difficulty flying and even appeared to be "hovering," he said. "It looked like he had no engine, like he was trying to pull up but he couldn't," he said. Nelson, 25, of Longmont, said there was nothing he and his co-workers could do once they got to the crash scene. "Everything was crumpled into each other," he said. Kim R. Johnson, who was in a parking lot off County Road 1, said the Cessna 172 appeared to have damage to one wing. He said it crashed with a thud. "I was expecting an explosion, and it was just a big thud," he said. He said the other plane banked, circled the crash site then headed west. About six miles away, Don Poncelow had just landed at the Longmont airport after a training flight with an instructor pilot when he saw a plane coming in low. "I looked up and I could tell she was having trouble. She wasn't out of control, but she wasn't in control, either," Poncelow said. "Something was just not right. She was having trouble keeping her wings level." He said that after the plane clipped the power lines, it skidded across a road and crashed into a fence. Carissa Muilenburg of Mile High Skydiving Center at the airport said one of their planes was landing around the time of the crash after ferrying skydivers to a drop. She said the skydiving pilot reported there was a mayday call because of the incoming plane and he had to quickly get off the runway after landing.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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