Crumpled Philadelphia plane Crash Black Box seen in a new photo

New photos of a private aircraft accident in Philadelphia reveal a crumpled black box that is left of crafts on Tuesday.
The National Transport Safety Committee says A black box was discovered Eight feet under the soil was buried at the collision site. Ambulance Jet Rescue Air confirmed that his Learjet 55 crashed as he left Northeast Philadelphia at the end of last week.
The company announced that at the time there were four crew members and two passengers on the plane – a pilot, a copy, a doctor, a paramedic, a pediatric patient and her mother. They were all Mexican nationals.
The NTSB confirmed that they had recovered a black box on Sunday but did not post photos of the device.
Eerie photos show the interior of a convicted Medevac jet that crashed into Philadelphia
“The components will be sent to the NTSB vehicle discoloration in Washington, DC for an estimate,” the NTSB statement said on Sunday. “NTSB investigators have recovered both engines. The wreck recovery continues tomorrow and all wreckage will be sent to a safe place in Delaware for further examination.”
Black boxes and flight recorders are tools that help investigators reconstruct events that led to a aircraft crash. They are orange to find them easier to find in the wreck, and are usually installed in the tail part of the plane, which is considered the most successful part of the aircraft, the NTSB website states.
What do we know about the victims of the collision of Philadelphia
Air accident in northeast Philadelphia (X / @philaoem)
The collision killed all those on the ship of the aircraft as well as one person hitting the ground. Those on the plane were all Mexican nationals.
Mayor of Philadelphia Cheslelle Parker, Center, speaks during a press conference after a plane crash in Philadelphia on Friday, January 31, 2025. (Matt Rourke/AP)
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In the meantime, 38-year-old Jason Rodriguez-Koji was in the area at the time of the collision-cars disappeared, according to Fox 29. His family says he was buying the last time they were heard.
Fox News’ Pilar Arias, Andrea Margolis, Greg Wehner and Associated Press contributed to this report.