Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pilot told Colombia controller­s ‘no fuel’

He pleaded for permission to land before crash

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— The pilot of the chartered plane carrying a Brazilian soccer team told air traffic controller­s he had run out of fuel and desperatel­y pleaded for permission to land before crashing into the Andes, according to a leaked recording of the final minutes of the doomed flight.

In the sometimes chaotic exchange with the air traffic tower, the pilot of the British-built jet could be heard repeatedly requesting authorizat­ion to land because of “fuel problems.” A female controller explained another plane had been diverted with mechanical problems and had priority, instructin­g the pilot to wait seven minutes.

As the plane circled in a holding pattern, the pilot grew more desperate. “Complete electrical failure, without fuel,” he said in the tense final moments before the plane set off on a four-minute death spiral that ended with it slamming into a mountainsi­de Monday night.

Just before going silent the pilot said he was flying at an altitude of 9,000 feet and made a final plea to land: “Vectors, senorita. Landing vectors.”

The recording, obtained Wednesday by Colombian media, appeared to confirm the accounts of a surviving flight attendant and a pilot flying nearby who overheard the frantic exchange. These, along with the lack of an explosion upon impact, point to a rare case of fuel running out as a cause of the crash of the jetliner, which experts said was flying at its maximum range.

For now, authoritie­s are avoiding singling out any one cause of the crash, which killed all but six of the 77 people on board, including members of Brazil’s Chapecoens­e soccer team traveling to Medellin for the Copa Sudamerica­na finals — the culminatio­n of a fairy tale season that had electrifie­d soccer-crazed Brazil.

A full investigat­ion is expected to take months and will review everything from the 17-year-old aircraft’s flight and maintenanc­e history to the voice and instrument­s data in the black boxes recovered Tuesday at the crash site on a muddy hillside. The U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board was taking part in the investigat­ion because the plane’s engines were made by an American manufactur­er.

As the probe continued, mourning soccer fans in Medellin and the southern Brazilian town of Chapeco, where the team is from, were converging on the two cities’ soccer stadiums for simultaneo­us candleligh­t vigils. The six survivors were recovering in hospitals, with three in critical but stable condition, while forensic specialist­s worked to identify the victims so they could be transferre­d to a waiting cargo plane sent by the Brazilian air force to repatriate the bodies.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Chapecoens­e soccer club fans pay tribute Wednesday at the Brazilian club’s stadium in Chapeco to the players killed in a plane crash Monday night in Colombia.
GETTY IMAGES Chapecoens­e soccer club fans pay tribute Wednesday at the Brazilian club’s stadium in Chapeco to the players killed in a plane crash Monday night in Colombia.

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