A small plane crashed into the backyard of a Phoenix home just minutes after takeoff, leaving three people injured.
A mechanical issue caused a Piper P-28 plane to crash into a home when the pilot turned around just six minutes after taking off from Deer Valley Airport on Wednesday morning.
'It was a big bang,' a witness told Fox News. 'It sounded like, almost like a bomb went off, or someone slammed their trash can really hard.'
'My kids were the first ones to find it, and they looked out the window and saw all the action was already here, so I'm glad everybody's safe.'
The plane crashed into the roof of one home at around 7.20am, damaging a baby's room and a second bedroom, before it fell into another homes backyard, Fire Captain Todd Keller said.
The child wasn't in the room at the time, but the broken wing leaked gasoline into the home, according to Keller.
The gasoline leak prompted a hazmat crew response and forced people to evacuate their homes, AZ Central reported.
'We do have fuel leaking into that attic right now,' Keller told the outlet, adding that it had created a fire hazard.
A Piper P-28, carrying a student pilot and instructor, crashed on its way back to Deer Valley Airport after reports of a mechanical issue
A neighbor's doorbell footage caught the terrifying moment the plane crashed into the homes
Three people were injured, including a man inside one of the homes and both of those inside the aircraft
The street was closed off by emergency services as a precaution at around 10am and police warned the public to avoid the area due to the gasoline spill.
According to Keller, a student pilot and an instructor were on board and were able to climb free from the wreckage. They were both hospitalized, Fox reported.
A man in one of the two homes was also injured and hospitalized. He was listed in stable condition, the outlet said.
Video captured by Fox News saw the wing of the plane on the roof of one home, with the main body next to a swimming pool in the backyard of the neighboring home.
American Red Cross spokesperson Georgi Donchetz told the outlet that two people from each home were told to vacate and went to a neighbor's home.
'They seem to be in good spirits, considering everything,' she said. 'Shows how important it is to step up for your neighbors and be there.'
Four dogs were also moved from the area, according to Donchetz.
The names of those injured were not immediately available.
The two onboard were able to climb free but were later hospitalized
A piece of the aircrafts wing as left on the roof of one home while the main body was seen next to the nextdoor neighbor's pool
Austin Carlson, a student pilot and nearby resident, told Fox News that he was 'definitely speechless.'
He had looked to fly the exact plane that had crashed not long before the incident.
'I looked at the tail number of the plane and realized that I actually was going to fly in that plane and get my pilot's license,' he said.
According to Carlson, he said he didn't feel safe and the plane was too old for his liking.
The plane, according to FlightAware, was from 1968.
'My parents weren't comfortable with my flying in a plane that's, you know, very old,' Carlson said.
He said that he was 'very grateful' that he didn't choose to fly the plane in the end, but he was 'also sad for whatever happened and whoever was involved in it.'
The Federal Aviation Administration has launched an investigation into the incident.
The Daily Mail reached out to the FAA for comment.

