The Scotsman

Pilot’s ‘world ended’ in helicopter disaster

- By LAURA PATERSON

The pilot of a helicopter that crashed off Shetland leaving four people dead has said his “world ended” with the fatal incident.

Martin Miglans told a fatal accident inquiry into the Sumburgh Airport crash that he will never fly again due to the trauma.

“It has destroyed my head,” he said in a statement. “My world ended with that crash.”

Mr Miglans, his co-pilot and 12 other passengers survived when the Sup er Puma ditched on its approach in 2013. The pilot said he sustained a fractured spine and now walks on crutches.

A pilot has told a fatal accident inquiry (FAI) his “world ended” when the helicopter he was flying crashed into the North Sea, killing four passengers.

Martin Mi glans said in a statement he struggled to remember immediatel­y prior to the crash until the “horror and shock of seeing the sea”.

Mr Miglans, his co-pilot and 12 other passengers survived when the Super Puma ditched on its approach to Sumburgh Airport, Shetland, in 2013.

Sarah Da rn ley ,45, from Elgin, Mo ray; GaryMc crossan, 59, from Inverness; Duncan Munro ,46, from Bishop Auckland, Count y Durham, and George Allison, 57, from Winchester, Hampshire, died in the incident.

The F AI, which is being held virtually, heard from Mr Mi glans’ written statement in which he said: “It has destroyed my head. My world ended with that crash.”

The“cock pit filling with water catches me everyday ”, he added.

He said he had no memory of speaking on a recording recovered from the aircraft, even after hearing it, saying he experience­s “complete dissociati­on” from it.

“I just remember coming out of the cloud and there being water and that is it,” he said in the statement.

“It is wrong and I am pulling as hard as I can ... it is all lost by then.”

He added: “That is my nightmare to this day. I didn’t understand how it could have happened.”

Mr Mi glans said he cannot remember check-height alerts prior to the crash, only the “horror and shock of seeing the sea”.

The pilot said he sustained a fractured spine, now walks on crutches and will never fly again.

He also wrote that he has been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder, but does not want treatment or sympathy, and all he has in his life is the crash and the inquiry, which has been “hanging over” him for seven years.

The inquiry also heard from Philip Sleight, deputy chief inspector of the Air Accidents Investigat­ion Branch (AAIB).

He read part sofa nA AI B report, published in 2016, which found the pilots failed to properly monitor the flight instrument­s and failed to notice their air speed was decreasing until it was too late to avoid the Super Puma plunging into the sea.

A statement of agreed evidence confirms no mechanical fault was discovered with the helicopter, which was returning from the Borgsten Dolphin support vessel to Sumburgh Airport.

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 ??  ?? 0 From left, Duncan Munro, 46, George Allison, 57, Gary Mccrossan, 59, and Sarah Darnley, 45, who died when a helicopter ditched near Sumburgh, Shetland, in 2013
0 From left, Duncan Munro, 46, George Allison, 57, Gary Mccrossan, 59, and Sarah Darnley, 45, who died when a helicopter ditched near Sumburgh, Shetland, in 2013

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