Yesterday morning, around 10:15 a.m. local time, horror unfolded at Statesville Regional Airport in North Carolina when a Cessna 550 Citation II business jet attempting to land suddenly slammed into the runway area and erupted into a massive fireball, leaving several people dead and the tight-knit community in shock.
Witnesses painted a chilling scene: the twin-engine jet appeared unusually low on approach amid low cloud cover and drizzle before impact, with emergency crews rushing in as thick black smoke billowed into the winter sky. The Iredell County Sheriff’s Office confirmed multiple fatalities at the scene, though authorities have not released names or exact figures yet.


Public aviation records show the plane involved — tail number N257BW — is registered to GB Aviation Leasing LLC, a company associated with retired NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. That connection has sparked widespread speculation about who was aboard, but officials stress that no passenger identities, including whether Biffle or his family were on the flight, have been verified.
According to flight tracking data and initial investigative leads, the jet had just departed Statesville shortly before the crash and was attempting to return moments later when the tragedy occurred. The precise cause — whether mechanical troubles, weather factors, or other issues — remains under investigation by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).
Emergency responders — including fire crews, EMS, and county rescue squads — battled flames and secured the debris field, but the intense heat made early rescue efforts extremely challenging. Nearby roads were closed, and the airport has been shut down pending cleanup and investigation, leaving families and travelers facing disruption and grief.
Officials held a press briefing later in the afternoon, confirming that while the death toll is being finalized, several fatalities are certain and at least one person may have survived but remains in serious condition. They reiterated that release of names and passenger details will wait until next of kin have been notified.
As investigators comb through wreckage and flight data, the community — from local residents to the broader motorsports world — is left to process this sudden, heartbreaking loss. In the coming days, more official updates are expected as the FAA and NTSB work to piece together exactly what went wrong on that fateful flight.




