THIS is the moment an out-of-control plane plummets towards the ground in a horror crash which killed 10 people including three children all under the age of 10.

Terrifying footage shows the jet nose dive through the sky before huge flames and plumes of black smoke erupt from the warehouse.

Video still showing a small plane highlighted by a red circle in the sky above a town, with text overlay "Una avioneta cayó cerca del Aeropuerto de Toluca" (A small plane crashed near the Toluca Airport).Moments before the horror crash footage shows the jet loose control mid-air Video capture of a plane crash near Toluca Airport.The jet nose dives from the sky before crashing into the industrial warehouse MEXICO-ACCIDENT-AIRCRAFTEmergency services work to extinguish a fire at the crash siteCredit: AFP

The of the same family, were a boy aged four and two girls aged nine and two.

Five adult passengers also when the private plane smashed into a warehouse on an industrial estate near Mexico’s Toluca Airport, around 12.30pm local time yesterday.

The Cessna Citation III had taken off from the famous Pacific resort of Acapulco half an hour earlier.

Initial local reports said six bodies had been found inside the wreckage of the plane before the confirmed death toll rose to 10.

A probe into the accident was ongoing today, with investigators said to be focusing on the theory an engine problem was to blame.

In the and air traffic controllers, which has emerged, he could be heard saying: “We’re crashing.”

JetPro, the company operating the air taxi service which has a fleet of 11 jets and four helicopters, has yet to comment.

Servicios Aereos Estrella, the company initially wrongly named as the private jet operator, said in a statement: “We deeply regret the accident that occurred and accompany with respect and solidarity the people and families affected by this terrible event, wishing them strength in these difficult moments.

“We would also like to inform you that the aircraft involved doesn’t belong to Servicios Aereos Estrella and neither is it operated by us.”

The ten people who died have already been fully or partly named.

The pilot was identified locally as Juan Carlos Olivares Casas and his co-pilot as Walding Sanchez Manzano.

The adult passengers killed have been named as Raul Gomez Ruiz, 60; Olga Janine Buenfil Cardone, 60; Gustavo Palomino Olet, 50; Ilse Lizeth Hernandez Tellez, 32; and Raul Gomez Buenfil, 31.

The children who died have only been identified so far by their first names – Raul, four, Natalia, two, and Ximena, nine.

could be seen rising into the air after the private jet came down.

Cristobal Castaneda, Minister of Public Security for the State of Mexico which Toluca is part of, said: “Two blocks around the premises the plane crashed into had to be evacuated because of the fuel and gas tanks inside.

“The evacuation was carried out as a precautionary measure.”

Footage from the scene showed the Cessna hit a football pitch near a children’s play area before smashing into the warehouse.

The impact left a gaping hole in its wall withwhich had to be put out by firefighters.

Miraculously no-one was inside the premises at the time, with local reports pointing to employees having been given the day off.

Toluca Airport, just five miles from the spot where the plane came down, was its final scheduled destination.

Pilot Juan Carlos Olivares Casas was aged 61 and his co-pilot 72.

The passengers killed are understood to have been officially named by Mexican authorities, who kept back the surnames of the children to protect their full identities.

At least six dead after small plane crashes in central MexicoCivil Protection, firefighters, and forensic experts working at the scene of the crash in MexicoCredit: EPA At least six dead after small plane crashes in central MexicoThe plane crashed into a warehouse near an airport in the central Mexican city of TolucaCredit: EPA MEXICO-ACCIDENT-AIRCRAFTAerial view of emergency services working to extinguish the fire caused by the crashCredit: AFP At least six dead after small plane crashes in central MexicoEmergency workers clamber over rubble at the crash siteCredit: EPA