Navy Jet Hits Virginia Apartments, With Seven Hurt And Three Still Missing

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Posted on 6th April 2012 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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A Navy fighter jet crashed into a Virginia Beach, Va., apartment complex Friday, injuring at least seven people and leaving three others still unaccounted for, according to Reuters.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/07/us-usa-crash-navy-idUSBRE8350EX20120407

The F/A-18D jet “suffered a catastrophic mechanical malfunction” while conducting a training flight, according to the Pentagon.

Both pilots ejected from the jet before the aircraft hit the Mayfair Mews, damaging six buildings, Reuters reported. The Mews is a facility for the elderly, and is located less than two miles from Naval Air Station Oceana, where the Navy jet was based.

Four people were taken to the hospital to be treated. Both pilots were found conscious, and didn’t appear to have suffered major injuries, according to Reuters.

Responders were still searching for three residents of one of the Mayfair Mews’ buildings.

 

 

Pakistan Jet Crash Kills All 152 Aboard The Flight

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Posted on 28th July 2010 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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All 152 people aboard a Pakistani jet were killed Wednesday when the plane crashed into a ridge, making it the worst commercial aircraft diaster in the nation’s history, The Los Angeles Times reported.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-0728-pakistan-crash-20100728,0,7159422.story

Two Americans were among the victims of the accident, which happened as the jet was flying through heavy fog and torrential monsoon rains. There were 146 passengers and six crew members on the flight.

The Air Blue jet. an Airbus 321, was en route from Karachi to the Pakistani capital when it crashed at roughly 9:45 a.m. local time, in what The Time reported was the Margalla Hills area outside of Islamabad.

 The plane’s black box was recovered, as had about 100 bodies as of Wednesday afternoon. The plane wreckage was in a ravine, making it hard for rescue crews to bring up the bodies.

According to The Times, the jet was at 2,600 feet and getting ready to land at Islamabad’s Benazir Bhutto International Airport when air traffic controllers told it to land on a different runway. The pilot did change direction, but then abruptly ascended 3,000 feet.   

The pilot was in contact with air traffic control two minutes before the crash, and didn’t complain of any problems.

 

DJ AM seeks $20 million for plane crash damages

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Posted on 16th March 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 3/16/2009

LOS ANGELES (AP) — DJ AM is seeking $20 million in damages related to a plane crash in South Carolina last year that killed four others.

The celebrity disc jockey, whose real name is Adam Goldstein, is suing the plane’s manufacturer, Learjet, and several other companies.

Goldstein is seeking $10 million for medical expenses, lost earnings, profits and economic damages and another $10 million related to non-economic losses, such as mental and physical pain, according to a document filed Friday.

A jury will decide any damage award if the case goes to trial.

Several of the companies sued last year by Goldstein and fellow crash survivor Travis Barker are seeking a trial delay until after a government investigation of the Sept. 19 crash is complete.

A lawyer for Learjet did not immediately return a phone message on Monday afternoon.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Brazil Prosecutors want charges against pilots restored

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Posted on 6th February 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 2/6/2009

SAO PAULO (AP) — A Brazilian prosecutor wants negligence charges reinstated against two New York pilots whose small jet was involved in one of Brazil’s worst air disasters.

Pilots Joseph Lepore and Jan Paladino were accused of contributing to the 2006 crash of a Brazilian passenger jet that killed 154 people when their Embraer Legacy jet collided with a Boeing 737 over the Amazon.

A federal judge threw out negligence charges last year, saying the two pilots did not know they were on a collision course.

Now federal prosecutor Analicia Trindade has filed a motion to overturn the judge’s decision. Her spokeswoman says the prosecutor “feels the two pilots failed to follow proper emergency measures when they realized the plane’s communications system was flawed.”

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Trial over Concorde crash set for February 2010

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Posted on 12th January 2009 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 1/12/2009

PARIS (AP) — French prosecutors say the manslaughter trial of Continental Airlines and five people over the 2000 crash of a Concorde jet that killed 113 people will begin outside Paris next year.

They said Monday the trial is set to open Feb. 2, 2010, in the Paris suburb of Pontoise, and should last until the following May.

The Air France Concorde crashed into a hotel after takeoff from Charles de Gaulle airport in July 2000, killing all 109 people on board — mostly German tourists — and four on the ground.

Investigators say the crash was caused in part by a titanium strip from a Continental DC-10 that was on the runway when the Concorde took off.

Employees of Continental, the Concorde’s maker and France’s civilian aviation authority are to stand trial.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Mexico rules out bomb, failed engine in jet crash

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Posted on 7th November 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 11/7/2008

By E. EDUARDO CASTILLO
Associated Press Writer

MEXICO CITY (AP) _ Mexican experts say they have ruled out a bomb or engine failure as the cause of a plane crash that killed Mexico’s interior secretary.

The probe into the cause of Tuesday’s crash continues, but officials of Mexico’s Transportation Department said the findings reinforced their initial opinion that no foul play was involved.

“This reinforced the hypothesis that the crash was an accident,” said Transportation Secretary Luis Tellez.

Tellez told a news conference on Friday that all parts of the plane necessary for flight had been found at the crash scene, proving that none had been lost in flight.

Investigators from the federal Attorney General’s Office also said chemical tests revealed no trace of explosives.

From the start, authorities said it appeared to be an accident, but recent attacks on police officials by Mexico’s increasingly violent drug cartels led many here to speculate the crash had been an attack.

The violence has surged during a 2-year-old army and police offensive to wrest control from drug cartels.

Five people on the ground and nine people on the plane were killed in Tuesday’s crash, including Interior Secretary Juan Camilo Mourino and former anti-drug prosecutor Jose Luis Santiago Vasconcelos.

The 37-year-old Mourino, one of President Felipe Calderon’s closest confidants, was Mexico’s equivalent of vice president and domestic security chief. Santiago Vasconcelos had been the target of at least one previous assassination plot.

The crash occurred in clear weather, and in their last recorded radio conversation, the plane’s flight crew calmly discussed radio frequencies and speed with controllers. The tape went silent just as radar lost the plane’s altitude reading.

Two flight recorders from the Learjet 45 have been sent to the U.S. for examination. Tellez has said experts would need at least a week to analyze the plane’s voice and data recorders for clues to what went wrong.

Experts from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and Britain’s Civil Aviation Authority are in Mexico helping with the investigation.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

Black boxes from Mexican plane crash sent to US

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Posted on 7th November 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 11/7/2008

By ALEXANDRA OLSON
Associated Press Writer


MEXICO CITY (AP) _ Two flight recorders from a plane crash that killed Mexico’s No. 2 government official were sent to the U.S. for examination, officials said Thursday, amid widespread speculation — but no evidence — that drug cartels were to blame.

Both “black boxes” were found where the Learjet 45 slammed into rush-hour traffic in a posh Mexico City neighborhood, Transportation Secretary Luis Tellez said at a news conference. Five people on the ground and nine people on the plane were killed in Tuesday’s crash, including Interior Secretary Juan Camilo Mourino.

Officials say they have few clues as to why the plane suddenly dropped from the evening sky.

But they have been unusually open in publicizing details of the investigation, trying to discourage conspiracy theories that thrive in a country on edge from relentless news of drug-related shootings, kidnappings and beheadings. The violence has surged during a 2-year-old army and police offensive to wrest control from drug cartels.

The 37-year-old Mourino, one of President Felipe Calderon’s closest confidants, was Mexico’s equivalent of vice president and domestic security chief. Also on the plane was former anti-drug prosecutor Jose Luis Santiago Vasconcelos, who had been the target of at least one assassination attempt.

“Nobody is more interested than me in the truth emerging and the cause of this incident being cleared up,” Calderon said at a memorial ceremony for the dead.

Tellez said experts would need at least a week to analyze the plane’s voice and data recorders for clues to what went wrong.

The crash occurred in clear weather, and in their last recorded radio conversation, the plane’s flight crew calmly discussed radio frequencies and speed with controllers. The tape went silent just as radar lost the plane’s altitude reading.

“Everything was normal on the flight, and a few seconds before the accident, something happened that significantly altered” the situation, said Gilberto Lopez, a pilot overseeing the probe. “At this moment, all the possibilities are potentially important.”

He said experts are following the normal lines of investigation for any crash, including possible human error, mechanical failures, maintenance problems or turbulence caused by other aircraft.

Experts from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and Britain’s Civil Aviation Authority are in Mexico helping with the investigation.

On Thursday, Calderon’s office said that U.S. President-elect Barack Obama had expressed his condolences for the deaths in a phone call with Calderon, who had called to congratulate Obama on his victory.

In an editorial Thursday, El Universal newspaper urged people to wait for results of the investigation before jumping to conclusions. But it also noted that Mexico’s “history is filled with assassinations that have never been cleared up or whose resolution does not deserve the trust of public opinion.”

In an unrelated incident, a small plane owned by a flight school made an emergency landing in a field just outside Mexico City, injuring both people aboard the craft. There was no immediate information on their condition or the cause of the mishap.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.