| The 
				Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress took off from Bradley International 
				Airport on Wednesday morning and the crew contacted the air 
				traffic control tower five minutes later to report a problem, 
				National Transportation Safety Board member Jennifer Homendy 
				said at a news conference.
 During the crew's attempt to land back at the airport, the plane 
				struck stanchions near a runway and careened across a grassy 
				area and a taxiway before striking a de-icing facility, said 
				Homendy, whose agency sent a 10-member team to investigate the 
				crash.
 
 Rescue crews from numerous emergency response agencies raced to 
				the scene where a plume of thick, black smoke billowed skyward 
				after the crash.
 
 Seven people died in the crash and six others, including a 
				worker in the de-icing station, were treated for injuries 
				ranging from minor to critical, James Rovella, commissioner of 
				the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, told 
				the news conference.
 
 A total of 13 people were on board the plane, including three 
				crew members, Rovella said.
 
 The names of the seven people who died have not been released 
				pending notification of all the victims' families. All the 
				victims were adults, Rovella said.
 
 ESCAPE HATCH
 
 Some people on the plane opened an escape hatch and helped 
				others get out, he said.
 
 "During the course of the next coming days, you're going to hear 
				about some heroic efforts from some of the individuals that were 
				in or around that plane," he said.
 
 The airport, located in the town of Windsor Locks, was closed 
				for about 3-1/2 hours after the crash.
 
 The plane was operated by the Massachusetts-based Collings 
				Foundation, which is dedicated to the preservation and public 
				display of automotive and aviation-related history.
 
 "The Collings Foundation flight team is fully cooperating with 
				officials to determine the cause of the crash of the B-17 Flying 
				Fortress and will comment further when details become known," 
				the foundation said in a statement.
 
 The vintage plane was one of only 18 B-17 aircraft still 
				operating in the United States.
 
 "There's a real need for scrutiny and oversight if these planes 
				are going to continue flying," U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, 
				a Democrat from Connecticut, told an earlier news conference.
 
 (Reporting by Peter Szekely and Maria Caspani in New York, Alex 
				Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles and David Shepardson in Washington; 
				Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Peter Cooney)
 
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