Marin Independent Journal

NTSB: Pilot error likely caused vintage bomber’s fatal crash

- By Dave Collins

Pilot error probably caused the 2019 crash of a World War II-era bomber in Connecticu­t that killed seven people and wounded six others, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said in a report released Tuesday. It also cited inadequate maintenanc­e as a contributi­ng factor.

The four-engine, propeller-driven B-17G Flying Fortress bomber with 13 people aboard crashed at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport, north of Hartford, during a traveling vintage aircraft show on Oct. 2, 2019.

The pilot, Ernest “Mac” McCauley, reported a problem with one of the engines shortly after takeoff, and the plane crashed into a maintenanc­e building and burst into flames after striking the runway lights during a landing attempt.

The NTSB said the flight data indicated that the landing gear was extended too early, adding drag that slowed the plane, and it was traveling too slow on its return to the airport.

“The B-17 could likely have overflown the approach lights and landed on the runway had the pilot kept the landing gear retracted and accelerate­d to 120 mph until it was evident the airplane would reach the runway,” the NTSB said.

In the report, there was also a call on the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to adopt tighter regulation­s on vintage aircraft flights offered to the public.

McCauley, 75, of Long Beach, California, was a veteran pilot who colleagues said had great skills flying the B-17G. He and copilot Michael Foster, 71, of Jacksonvil­le, Florida, were

killed in the crash, along with five of the 10 passengers. The plane’s mechanic, Mitchell Melton, of Hawkins, Texas, was the only crew member to survive.

The NTSB said there was a power loss in two of the four engines during the flight, a problem it blamed

on McCauley’s “inadequate maintenanc­e.” McCauley also served as the maintenanc­e director of the plane’s owner, the Collings Foundation, based in Stow, Massachuse­tts.

The NTSB also said the Collings Foundation had an ineffectiv­e safety management system that failed to identify hazards, including the inadequate maintenanc­e of the plane. Investigat­ors said the system, as well as the FAA’s ineffectiv­e oversight of the system, also contribute­d to the accident.

The Collings Foundation said in a statement Tuesday that it is reviewing the NTSB’s findings. It did not directly address the NTSB’s findings.

“We knew Ernest “Mac” McCauley to be the most experience­d B-17 pilot in the world who was passionate about the care and condition of all aircraft,” the foundation said. “Responsibl­e flight and maintenanc­e operations have always been a top priority of the Collings Foundation, reflected by over thirty years’ worth of a safe operating record, and always will be.”

Melton, the mechanic, from Hawkins, Texas, told investigat­ors the No. 4 engine began losing power after takeoff and McCauley shut it off, despite Melton telling him there was no need to shut if off, according to NTSB documents.

Lawyers for relatives of people killed in the crash and survivors said in a statement that the NTSB report will help the families get some closure and prevent similar tragedies. The families and survivors are suing the Collings Foundation over the deaths and injuries. The foundation has denied wrongdoing.

“Unfortunat­ely, our clients’ lives were forever changed when the Collings Foundation’s B-17 crashed at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport,” the lawyers said. “At the appropriat­e time ... we will present evidence to a Connecticu­t jury that the Collings Foundation’s failures as detailed in the NTSB report, caused the horrific injuries and deaths suffered by our clients.”

 ?? NTSB ?? Damage from a World War II-era B-17 bomber that crashed at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport in Windsor Locks, Conn.
NTSB Damage from a World War II-era B-17 bomber that crashed at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport in Windsor Locks, Conn.

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