MILWAUKEE — A plane carrying three people and over 50 dogs crashed onto the a golf course in eastern Wisconsin Tuesday morning.

Lake Country Fire and Rescue responded to a call of a downed aircraft around 9:04 a.m. at the Western Lakes Golf Club, about 15 miles west of Milwaukee, according to assistant chief Matthew Haerter. The first unit arrived five minutes later to find a twin-engine plane on the third hole as heavy snow conditions hit the area.

Club general manager Jason Hoelz told the Journal Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network, that a few staff members were performing maintenance on the course a few hundred feet away when they heard and saw the plane coming down.

“I was in a building up here and didn’t hear anything, but there was a couple employees working on the course that heard this plane coming down and witnessed it hitting the fifth green, crashing between two trees, (going) through a marsh and another 100 feet through the second hole fairway and onto the third hole, where it uprooted another tree and came to a rest,” Hoelz said. “In total, it skidded around a few hundred yards.”

The plane was reportedly flying from New Orleans to Waukesha to deliver 53 dogs to the Humane Animal Welfare Society of Waukesha. Three adults were also on the plane and were assessed and treated at the scene before being taken to a local trauma center with non-life-threatening injuries. 

A twin-engine plane crashed onto and slid 300 yards on the Western Lakes Golf Club course Nov. 15.

Immediately after the crash, Hoelz said that his staff jumped into action. They pulled the three passengers from the plane and also gathered the dogs in their crates. Some crates were damaged, but the staff were able to round up the dogs and all were brought to the maintenance building until HAWS arrived.

“I’m just happy we were able to help any way we could and glad we were on scene quickly and were able to provide some assistance,” Hoelz said.

Some of the 53 dogs sustained minor injuries like “bumps and scrapes that will be monitored over the next couple of days but are expected to be good to go and ready for adoption as scheduled”, according to HAWS director of organizational development Maggie Tate-Techtmann.

Because HAWS was preparing to receive the dogs at the Waukesha County Airport, they were there quickly to collect and treat them on scene before treating them at HAWS.

Twenty dogs remain at HAWS while the rest were sent to other shelters as planned.

“All are doing remarkably well,” Tate-Techtmann told the Journal Sentinel. “We are so grateful to the staff at Western Lakes Golf Club who were wonderful to work with and for the emergency response teams in Waukesha and for our team and how they responded. Everyone pivoted so well. I tell them all the time to be prepared for the unexpected, and the team did a remarkable job meeting the needs of these dogs today. Some are already out having fun in the snow and are on the road to finding their forever homes.”