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Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker warned that the toll was 'not etched in stone' and could yet rise

The death toll from the crash of a small jet with six people onboard into a busy Philadelphia neighbourhood on Friday has risen to seven, officials said Saturday, with 19 others wounded.
The incident marks another US aviation disaster after a passenger plane and a military helicopter collided midair in Washington earlier this week.
Video footage appeared to show the twin-engine plane descending at a sharp angle towards a residential area, sparking a huge fireball upon impact and showering wreckage over homes and vehicles.
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The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the aircraft was a Learjet 55 - an American-French business jet - that had taken off shortly before from Northeast Philadelphia Airport bound for Branson, Missouri.
The crash happened just after 6pm (2300 GMT).
On Saturday, Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker said that at least one other person, who was in a car, had also been killed, and that 19 people had been wounded.
Speaking at a press conference, Parker warned that the toll was "not etched in stone" and could yet rise.
"We have a lot of unknowns about who was where on the streets of this neighborhood last night at the time of impact," said the city's managing director Adam Thiel, warning that it could be days before the full toll emerged.
A young girl who had been in the US for medical care, her mother, and members of the flight and medical crews accompanying her onboard were killed in the crash, the children's hospital that treated her told AFP.
"The patient had received care from Shriners Children's Philadelphia and was being transported back to her home country in Mexico on a contracted air ambulance when the crash happened," said Mel Bower, a spokesman for Shriners Children's.
The aircraft's operator Jet Rescue Air Ambulance confirmed in a statement to US media that there were two passengers and four crew, adding, "At this time, we cannot confirm any survivors."
Dozens of emergency workers were on the scene outside Roosevelt Mall, a strip mall in Northeast Philadelphia with retailers and food outlets.
US President Donald Trump on Friday took to his Truth Social platform and said he was "sad" to see "more souls lost" in the Philadelphia tragedy. He praised first responders, adding: "God Bless you all."
Several witnesses told local TV crews that they saw body parts in or near the wreckage, as Philadelphia City Council member Mike Driscoll said he feared residents or others on the ground may have been killed.
"It doesn't look good. And it's a sad situation here," he told CNN.
The FAA said it was launching an investigation with the National Transportation Safety Board.
Both agencies are already probing the deadliest US air disaster in almost a quarter century, after a passenger jet operated by an American Airlines subsidiary collided with a Black Hawk helicopter on Wednesday.
The airliner with 64 people onboard was coming in for a night landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington - just a few miles from the White House - when it collided with the US Army helicopter on a training mission.
Divers were scouring Friday for the remaining bodies in the frigid Potomac River, after having pulled at least 41 victims from the water.
Investigators on Friday found the helicopter's black box after having already retrieved the cockpit voice and flight data recorder from the Bombardier jet operated by an American Airlines subsidiary.
Officials are confident data can be fully extracted from the recorders, said NTSB member Todd Inman, adding an investigation was still being carried out.
However, the lack of clarity over the accident's cause did not deter Trump's politicized commentary.
He appeared to place blame on the military helicopter in a post on the Truth Social platform, saying it was "flying too high, by a lot."
This followed a news conference Thursday where the Republican pinned the blame for the crash on his Democratic predecessors Joe Biden and Barack Obama, claiming without evidence they had hired the wrong people due to non-discrimination initiatives known as DEI.
Chesley Sullenberger, who famously landed a stricken passenger plane on New York's Hudson River in 2009, told network MSNBC he was "disgusted" but "not surprised" by Trump's rhetoric.
Aviation experts, meanwhile, homed in on whether the helicopter crew could see through military night-vision goggles and whether the Reagan National Airport control tower was understaffed.
Interviews of staff who were in the control tower at the time of the crash have already begun, the NTSB said.
The collision was the first major crash in the US since 2009, and the deadliest since an American Airlines jet crash in Belle Harbor, New York in 2001 that killed all 260 aboard.
Among those on Wednesday's doomed airliner were several US skaters and coaches, and Russian couple Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, who won the 1994 world pairs title.
Two Chinese citizens and a Filipino were also among the victims.
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