Cape Breton Post

Heavy fog may have disoriente­d pilot in Kobe Bryant crash

-

The pilot of a helicopter that crashed outside Los Angeles Jan. 26, killing basketball great Kobe Bryant, his daughter and all seven others on board, likely became disoriente­d in the fog, say federal investigat­ors.

Pilot Ara Zobayan told air traffic controller­s his chopper was climbing out of heavy clouds when in fact it was descending immediatel­y before slamming into a hillside near the town of Calabasas, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board wrote in newlyrelea­sed findings.

The board, which has not yet issued a final report on the cause of the accident, said pilots can become confused about an aircraft’s attitude and accelerati­on when they cannot see the sky or landscape around them, causing “spatial disorienta­tion.”

“Without outside references or attention to the helicopter’s attitude display, the actual pitch and bank angles have the potential to be misperceiv­ed,” the NTSB said.

Zobayan was killed in the wreck.

An NTSB board member told reporters in the days after the crash that clouds and fog causing limited visibility in the foothills north of Los Angeles would likely be a key focus of the investigat­ion.

In February, the board said an examinatio­n of the helicopter’s engines and rotors found no evidence of “catastroph­ic mechanical failure.”

A series of charts issued with the NTSB report shows the aircraft gaining speed, banking sharply to the left and plummeting just seconds after Zobayan told air traffic controller­s he was “climbing to 4,000” feet to fly above the cloud layer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada