Los Angeles Times

Top helicopter model involved in another fatal crash

- By Kim Christense­n and Colleen Shalby

The crash of a Robinson R44 helicopter on Catalina Island this week was the fourth fatal U.S. accident involving the popular fourseat model since early April, federal aviation records show.

Search crews spotted the wreckage of the R44 in rugged terrain on the northwest end of Catalina on Tuesday morning after the pilot’s family reported that he failed to return to Torrance Airport from one of his frequent pleasure flights over the island, Los Angeles Sheriff ’s Sgt. Craig Harman said.

Paramedics who rappelled to the crash site from a sheriff’s helicopter found the body of the pilot, who was believed to be the sole occupant of the R44, Harman said. The pilot’s identity has not been released pending the notificati­on of relatives, Harman said.

The cause of the crash is being investigat­ed by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, according to FAA spokesman Allen Kenitzer.

As is common practice, a Robinson Helicopter representa­tive will participat­e alongside federal investigat­ors, company President Kurt Robinson said, declining to comment on the circumstan­ces of the crash.

“We are devastated by the loss of life in this tragic accident,” he said in an email to The Times. “Our thoughts and sympathies are with the families and friends of the pilot. As always, our first concern and priority is the safety and welfare of the people involved with our aircraft.”

The R44, manufactur­ed in Torrance by Robinson Helicopter Co., is the world’s bestsellin­g civilian helicopter, a top choice among f light schools, sightseein­g companies, police department­s and recreation­al pilots.

It also has been involved in scores of fatal accidents, including several recent ones, according to NTSB records.

On May 17, a pilot and his passenger died when an R44 crashed in mountainou­s terrain near Alpine, Utah.

On April 29, all three people aboard an R44 on a sightseein­g flight perished when it plunged into a residentia­l neighborho­od near Kailua, Hawaii.

One person was killed on April 4 when an R44 made a forced landing on a roadway near Tampa, Fla. The pilot and passenger were not injured, but flying debris from the wreck killed a passenger in a nearby vehicle.

Those accidents remain under investigat­ion by the NTSB, as does the January 2018 crash of an R44 that killed three people in a Newport Beach neighborho­od.

Robinson R44s were involved in 42 fatal crashes in the U.S. from 2006 to 2016, more than any other civilian helicopter, according to a Times analysis last year of NTSB accident reports.

That translates to 1.6 deadly accidents per 100,000 hours flown — a rate nearly 50% higher than any other of the dozen most common civilian models whose flight hours are tracked by the FAA.

Robinson Helicopter disputed The Times’ analysis, contending that the FAA undercount­s the flight hours for the R44, leading to an inflated accident rate. The company vigorously defended its record, maintainin­g that its aircraft are safe and reliable when flown within their operating limits.

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