A small plane catches fire at the California airport, 10 people on board, no injuries reported



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A small jet plane slid Wednesday on the runway of a northern California airport and caught fire with 10 people on board, but fortunately no one was injured, officials said.

The twin-engine pilot Cessna Citation interrupted his takeoff at the Oroville Municipal Airport shortly before noon when he slipped on the runway and caught fire, said Ian McGregor, spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

"They came out of the plane quickly," said Rick Carhart, a spokesman for the CalFire / Butte County Fire Department. "The people had already gone down and had quickly left the place" at the time of the arrival of the first fire truck.

The scene where a jet fired after breaking off Wednesday at Oroville, California (California Highway Patrol via AP)

The scene where a jet fired after breaking off Wednesday at Oroville, California (California Highway Patrol via AP)

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The plane was scheduled to travel to Portland International Airport, Oregon.

On the plane were two pilots and eight passengers. The grass fire was quickly extinguished, Carhart told the Oroville Mercury Registry.

The unit caught fire at the moment the fire crews arrived and it took more than an hour to extinguish the fire. He had just been refueled with 480 pounds of fuel, the newspaper reported.

The plane was personally chartered and the company's passengers had spent the night in Oroville, said Joe Deal, chief of the fire department and police of Oroville.

The plane slipped from the end of the runway into the grass and caught fire. (California Highway Patrol via AP)

The plane slipped from the end of the runway into the grass and caught fire. (California Highway Patrol via AP)

"He was trying to take off, but early reports show that he has never managed to take off," said Deal.

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Part of the nearby Highway 162 has been closed, lest the spilled fuel could ignite. The airport, which had no commercial flights, remained open.

The incident was under investigation by the FAA.

Associated Press contributed to this report.

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