Chicago Sun-Times

‘ Litany of failures’ doomed Akron plane

Report cites lack of training, oversight for accident that killed nine

- Bart Jansen @ ganjansen USA TODAY

Federal investigat­ors found a “litany of failures” in pilot training and in the operations of the charter company whose business jet plummeted into an Akron, Ohio, apartment building a year ago, killing all nine aboard.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board in a report made public Tuesday found that the pilots didn’t follow checklists and violated company procedures for approachin­g and landing at the Akron airport before crashing in an aerodynami­c stall on Nov. 10.

Their on- demand charter company, Execufligh­t, hadn’t checked why both pilots had been fired from previous employers for training problems and gave the captain a passing grade for a failing test, according to investigat­ors.

And a Federal Aviation Administra­tion inspector failed to catch inadequate pilot training, maintenanc­e and operations at the company, the board ruled.

“There were a litany of failures involved in this accident,” board member Robert Sumwalt said.

Execufligh­t, Sumwalt said, “was infested with sloppiness,” from the cockpit to the corporate offices.

Both pilots and seven passengers died when the Hawker 700A crashed about 2 miles short of the Akron runway during a flight from Dayton, Ohio. No one on the ground was hurt.

The plane descended twice as fast as company guidelines suggested, but the captain didn’t take the controls from the first officer who was flying even as the plane went too slow to stay aloft, investigat­ors found.

The pilots didn’t conduct a checklist for the approach or call out informatio­n such as the altitude of the plane or the lowering of landing gear, investigat­ors said. The first officer, who was flying the plane, set wing flaps at 45 degrees rather than the typical 25 degrees, which slowed the plane down more than usual, investigat­ors said.

Because of the problems with speed and altitude, company policy suggested the pilots should have aborted the landing, circled the airport and tried again, but they didn’t.

“We found a flight crew, a company and FAA inspectors who fell short of their obligation­s in regard to safety,” said Christophe­r Hart, the board chairman. “The protection­s built into the system were not applied, and they should have been.”

The captain warned the co- pilot that he was descending faster than the goal of 1,000 feet per minute while approachin­g the airport, according to a transcript of the cockpit recorder.

“You’re diving. Don’t dive,” the captain said. “Don’t go 2,000 feet per minute.”

About 10 seconds later, the plane’s warning system says “ground” and the pilot says “level off, guy” with the noise of a rattle that warns about a plane flying too slowly to stay aloft.

A few seconds after the rattle, the plane’s warning system says “pull up” and the thunk of an impact is heard.

The company hired both pilots in June 2015.

The first officer, Renato Marchese, 50, of Boynton Beach, Fla., had been fired from Sky King in February 2015 because of “significan­t performanc­e deficienci­es” with simulator training for a Boeing 737, according to investigat­ors.

With 4,382 hours of experience, he was flying the plane even though company executives said captains typically flew with passengers aboard and had co- pilots fly when planes were empty.

Earl Weener, a safety board member, said the company took a “cavalier attitude” toward pilot training.

Oscar Chavez Mosquera, 40, of Miami, was the captain who was fired by his former employer, Heralpin USA, in April 2015 after not attending required flight training, according to investigat­ors.

He had 6,170 hours of flight experience.

Execufligh­t gave the captain a 100% grade on the multiple- choice test about crew- resource management, but his answers deserved a 40% score, according to investigat­ors.

The captain had deficienci­es in understand­ing his responsibi­lities and flight- deck management, investigat­ors said.

“We found a flight crew, a company and FAA inspectors who fell short of their obligation­s in regard to safety.” Christophe­r Hart, NTSB chairman

 ?? PHIL LONG, AP ?? Firefighte­rs are on scene after a business jet crashed into an apartment building in Akron, Ohio, on Nov. 10. A National Transporta­tion Safety Board report, out Tuesday, revealed human errors.
PHIL LONG, AP Firefighte­rs are on scene after a business jet crashed into an apartment building in Akron, Ohio, on Nov. 10. A National Transporta­tion Safety Board report, out Tuesday, revealed human errors.

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