A ninth body was found in the wreckage of a Glasgow pub where a police helicopter plunged through the crowded bar's roof, Police Scotland said. "I can confirm that sadly a further body has tonight been located and removed from the scene," Deputy Chief Constable Rose Fitzpatrick said early Monday. "Efforts are ongoing as we speak to establish the identity of the latest fatality," she said in remarks quoted by the BBC. The additional casualty makes six dead in the pub and all three aboard the helicopter, police said, adding it could not rule out the possibility of more bodies being found. A band was performing in the Clutha Bar near the River Clyde about 10:30 p.m. Friday when the helicopter, carrying two police officers and a civilian pilot, spun down into the building, apparently after losing power, authorities said. Of the 32 people injured in the crash, 12 remained hospitalized early Monday, police said. Three of the 12 people were in intensive care in serious but stable condition. Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, the nation's political leader and head of government, called the accident a "black day for Glasgow and Scotland." British Prime Minister David Cameron said it was a "tragic event."