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Small aircraft lands dramatic crash only from golfers: 'Holy f -'

A small plane landed a dramatic crash on Friday, May 2, on a historic golf course in Los Angeles, when the players could be seen.

The Cessna 172 aircraft was supposed to land at the nearby Santa Monica Airport, but landed about 6 miles north on the golf course of the Riviera Country Club. The crash landing occurred on Friday, May 2, at 12:45 p.m. local time after the pilot reported engine problems according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

The Los Angeles fire brigade confirmed that the three passengers on board were unharmed according to KTLA. The video of the landing, divided into X and fascinated stunned golfers that watch horrified, and one said: “I didn't move” while another called: “Holy F —! Are you okay?”

The video showed the plane at a low angle. It crashed from the green and a path several times before it only updated from several golfers.

People turned to the Riviera Country Club and the FAA to receive official statements, but did not hear back immediately. The passengers on board the aircraft still have to be identified.

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A decade ago in 2015, Harrison Ford survived a similar fall landing in his personal vintage aircraft. The vintage Yellow Fighter aircraft, which was produced around World War II, plunged on the Penmar Golf Course, also near Santa Monica Airport. Ford was 72 at the time and the only person on board the aircraft.

“Harrison flew a Vintage aircraft from the Second World War today, which bothered when the engine problems started,” said a representative of Ford in a statement at the time. “He had no choice but to make an emergency landing, which he did. He was banged and received medical care in the hospital. The injuries suffered are not life -threatening, and it is expected to be completely recovering.”

The then commissioner of Santa Monica, Phil Brock, told the people that the star had suffered a head injury. “There were two doctors who had been on the golf course, the Mr. Ford visited for the first time, and the fire brigade of Santa Monica was the first to arrive,” said Brock.

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