Imperial Valley Press

NTSB: Wing parts from air ambulance fell far from wreckage

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — A new federal report says parts of the right wing on a medical transport plane that crashed last month in rural Nevada, killing all five people aboard, fell far from the main wreckage site.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board’s findings released Wednesday could support the agency’s initial theory that the aircraft had broken apart before hitting the ground. But NTSB did not release a probable cause in its threepage preliminar­y report.

The agency says parts of the plane’s right wing were located as far as three- quarters of a mile ( 1.1 kilometers) from where the single- engine Pilatus PC12 crashed in Stagecoach, Nevada, a rural community of about 2,500 residents outside of Reno.

Authoritie­s have said the Care Flight piloted by Scott Walton, 46, was headed from Reno to Salt Lake City, Utah, when it crashed around 9:15 p.m. on Feb. 24 amid a winter storm. Care Flight is a service of REMSA Health, and its aviation vendor is Guardian Flight.

In a statement Wednesday, Guardian Flight said it was reviewing the preliminar­y report and assessing any “additional steps” to strengthen its safety protocols: “The safety and well-being of our patients and crew is our utmost priority and we will continue to make significan­t investment­s to bolster our commitment.”

The other victims also included 69-year-old patient Mark Rand and his 66-year-old spouse Terri Rand, as well as two medical crew members, Edward Pricola, 32, and Ryan Watson, 27.

Walton contacted air traffic control minutes before the crash to report that the plane was climbing past 15,400 feet (4,694 meters), according to the report. But “no further radio transmissi­ons were received” from the pilot, the report states.

Just minutes later, the plane began to fall — dropping about 8,000 feet (2,440 meters) in 30 seconds — before the aircraft’s navigation tracking system went dark, according to the report.

Dan Rose, an aviation attorney representi­ng relatives of the Rands, told The Associated Press he was disappoint­ed by the lack of attention given in the report to weather conditions at the time.

The National Weather Service said it was snowing steadily when the flight left Reno, with winds around 20 mph ( 30 kph) and gusts up to 30 mph ( 50 kph). Visibility was under 2 miles ( 3.2 kilometers) with a cloud ceiling about 2,000 feet (600 meters).

 ?? NTSB VIA AP ?? In this image provided by The National Transporta­tion Safety Board, NTSB investigat­ors document the wreckage of a Pilatus PC-12 airplane, a medical air transport flight operated by Guardian Flight, in Feb. 26 in Dayton, Nev.
NTSB VIA AP In this image provided by The National Transporta­tion Safety Board, NTSB investigat­ors document the wreckage of a Pilatus PC-12 airplane, a medical air transport flight operated by Guardian Flight, in Feb. 26 in Dayton, Nev.

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