Vancouver Sun

Voice recording of plane crash to be heard

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Survivors of a fiery plane crash just outside Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport have won access to an audio recording of what was happening in the cockpit before their aircraft plummeted from the sky.

In a decision released Friday for a continuing legal action, Chief Justice Christophe­r Hinkson of the B.C. Supreme Court said granting access to the cockpit voice recorder serves a public good that outweighs any confidenti­ality concerns.

Hinkson ordered the Transporta­tion Safety Board to provide the recording to survivors and Northern Thunderbir­d Air Inc. after concluding it contained no “sensationa­l or disturbing” communicat­ion.

In October 2011, a plane carrying two pilots and seven passengers turned back shortly after taking off from Vancouver, only to crash about a kilometre short of the runway, clipping a car and slamming into a lamppost. All the passengers were seriously injured and both pilots died in hospital.

A Transporta­tion Safety Board report concluded the crash likely resulted from a loose oil cap on the plane’s left engine.

 ??  ?? This small plane crashed about a kilometre short of Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport in 2011. Ric Ernst/ Postmedia News/files
This small plane crashed about a kilometre short of Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport in 2011. Ric Ernst/ Postmedia News/files

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