The Denver Post

Helicopter tried to climb

Pilot attempted to avoid cloud layer during foggy day before fatal descent

- By Stefanie Dazio, David Koenig and Bernard Condon

The pilot of the helicopter that crashed near Los Angeles, killing former NBA superstar Kobe Bryant and eight others, told air traffic controller­s in his last radio message that he was climbing to avoid a cloud layer before plunging more than 1,000 feet into a hillside, an accident investigat­or said.

Radar indicated the helicopter reached a height of 2,300 feet Sunday morning before descending, and the wreckage was found at 1,085 feet, Jennifer Homendy of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said during a news conference Monday afternoon.

NTSB investigat­ors went to the crash site in Calabasas on Monday to collect evidence.

“The debris field is pretty extensive,” Homendy said.

“A piece of the tail is down the hill,” she said. “The fuselage is on the other side of that hill. And then the main rotor is about 100 yards beyond that.”

Some experts suggested that the pilot might have gotten disoriente­d because of fog but Homendy said investigat­ing teams would look at everything from the pilot’s history to the engines.

“We look at man, machine and the environmen­t,” she said. “And weather is just a small portion of that.”

The pilot had asked for and received special clearance to fly in heavy fog just minutes before the crash and was flying at 1,400 feet when he went south and then west, Homendy said.

The pilot then asked for air traffic controller­s to provide “flight following” radar assistance but was told the craft was too low for that assistance, Homendy said.

About four minutes later, “the pilot advised they were climbing to avoid a cloud layer,” she said. “When ATC asked what the pilot planned to do,

there was no reply. Radar data indicates the helicopter climbed to 2,300 feet and then began a left descending turn. Last radar contact was around 9:45 a.m.”

Two minutes later, someone on the ground called 911 to report the crash.

Randy Waldman, a helicopter flight instructor who teaches at the nearby Van Nuys airport, said a disoriente­d pilot might have only moments to avoid a fatal dive.

“If you’re flying visually, if you get caught in a situation where you can’t see out the windshield, the life expectancy of the pilot and the aircraft is maybe 10, 15 seconds, and it happens all the time, and it’s really a shame,” Waldman said.

Some experts raised questions of whether the helicopter should have even been flying. The weather was so foggy that the Los Angeles Police Department and the county sheriff’s department had grounded their own choppers.

The Sikorsky S-76 killed the retired athlete along with his 13year-old daughter Gianna and everyone else aboard and scattering debris over an area the size of a football field.

Crews recovered three bodies on Sunday and resumed the effort on Monday amid an outpouring of grief and shock around the world over the loss of the basketball great who helped lead the Los Angeles Lakers to five NBA titles during his dazzling 20-year career.

The pilot was identified as Ara Zobayan. Homendy said the pilot had reported 8,200 hours of flight time by July 2019. He was commercial­ly certified as a pilot and certified as a flight instructor, she said.

Several aviation experts said it is not uncommon for helicopter pilots to be given such permission, though some thought it unusual that it would be granted in airspace as busy as that over L.A.

But Kurt Deetz, who flew for Bryant dozens of times in the same chopper that went down, said permission is often granted in the area.

“It happened all the time in the winter months in L.A.,” Deetz said. “You get fog.”

The helicopter left Santa Ana in Orange County, south of Los Angeles, shortly after 9 a.m., heading north and then west. Bryant was believed to be headed for his youth sports academy in nearby Thousand Oaks, which was holding a basketball tournament Sunday in which Bryant’s daughter, known as Gigi, was competing.

Air traffic controller­s noted poor visibility around Burbank to the north and Van Nuys to the northwest. At one point, the controller­s instructed the chopper to circle because of other planes in the area before proceeding.

The aircraft crashed about 30 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles. When it struck the ground, it was flying at about 184 mph and descending at a rate of more than 4,000 feet per minute, according to data from Flightrada­r24.

Waldman said the same thing happened to John F. Kennedy Jr. when his plane dropped out of the sky near Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., in 1999.

“A lot of times somebody who’s doing it for a living is pressured to get their client to where they have to go,” Waldman said. “They take chances that maybe they shouldn’t take.”

Bryant had been known since his playing days for taking helicopter­s instead of braving the notoriousl­y snarled Los Angeles traffic. “I’m not going into L.A. without the Mamba chopper,” he joked on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” in 2018, referring to his own nickname, Black Mamba.

 ?? Ringo H.W. Chiu, The Associated Press ?? Fans take part in a memorial for Kobe Bryant on Monday near the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Bryant, the 18-time NBA all-star who won five championsh­ips during a 20-year career with the Los Angeles Lakers, died in a helicopter crash Sunday.
Ringo H.W. Chiu, The Associated Press Fans take part in a memorial for Kobe Bryant on Monday near the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Bryant, the 18-time NBA all-star who won five championsh­ips during a 20-year career with the Los Angeles Lakers, died in a helicopter crash Sunday.
 ?? Johannes Eisele, AFP/Getty Images ?? People pay their respects Monday outside Bryant Gymnasium at Lower Merion (Pa.) High School, which basketball legend Kobe Bryant attended.
Johannes Eisele, AFP/Getty Images People pay their respects Monday outside Bryant Gymnasium at Lower Merion (Pa.) High School, which basketball legend Kobe Bryant attended.

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