Death tolls rises to 15 following UPS plane crash in Louisville


A 15th person has died as a result of the UPS plane crash in Kentucky last month, officials announced.

Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg and Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear confirmed the death toll increase on social media Thursday night.

“Today, we lost Alain Rodriguez Colina due to his injuries from the UPS plane crash, bringing our total loss to 15,” Beshear wrote on X. “Let’s pray for these families today and in the days, months and years to come so they know they are not alone and they are loved.”

“May Alain’s memory be a blessing,” Greenberg added on Facebook.

Colina worked at Grade A Auto Parts, one of the two businesses struck when UPS Flight 2976 crashed on Nov. 4. The aircraft went down around 5:15 p.m. while attempting to depart UPS Worldport at Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport for Honolulu.

Video of the incident shows a fire on the left wing, and then a thick plume of smoke trailing the plane before it explodes into a massive fireball.

Fire and smoke mark where a UPS cargo plane crashed near Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport on Nov. 4, 2025 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by Stephen Cohen/Getty Images)

The entire left engine fell off the aircraft and was found in the airfield.

Dashboard cam video also captured the explosion as the plane lifted off the ground, rolled on its side and plowed into a storage facility, leaving a trail of flames in its wake.

All three people onboard the aircraft were killed, as were another 12 people on the ground. The victims onboard were identified by UPS as Capt. Richard Wartenberg, 57; First Officer Lee Truitt, 45; and Dana Diamond, 62, the relief captain. Those killed on the ground ranged in age from 3 to 65.

Colina’s death came on Christmas Day, nearly two months after he was severely injured in the devastating plane crash.

This combination photo provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) via UPS shows a sequence of framegrabs made from video where an engine is seen detaching from the plane's left wing upon takeoff at the Louisville International Airport in Louisville, Nov. 4, 2025. (UPS/NTSB via AP)
This combination photo provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) via UPS shows a sequence of framegrabs made from video where an engine is seen detaching from the plane’s left wing upon takeoff at the Louisville International Airport in Louisville, Nov. 4, 2025. (UPS/NTSB via AP)

According to a preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board, the left engine of the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 plane had separated from the wing as the plane accelerated down the runway. A bracket meant to hold the engine in place also cracked in two places, leading to flames.



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