Los Angeles Times

Skydiving instructor lacked license

Group says man involved in deadly tandem jump may also not have met other FAA regulation­s.

- By Brittny Mejia brittny.mejia@latimes.com Times staff writer Veronica Rocha contribute­d to this report.

A skydiving instructor involved in a deadly tandem jump earlier this month lacked proper licensing and may not have met other Federal Aviation Administra­tion regulation­s, according to a national skydiving organizati­on.

The instructor, identified as Yong Kwon of South Korea, leaped from an aircraft with first-time jumper Tyler Turner on Saturday. Their parachute did not deploy until they hit the ground, and both died.

FAA inspectors are investigat­ing the accident at Skydive Lodi Parachute Center in Acampo, Calif.

An FAA guideline for tandem jumps requires an instructor to hold a master parachute license issued by an organizati­on recognized by the FAA. However, the U.S. Parachute Assn., the country’s only FAA-accepted, nationally recognized skydiving organizati­on that licenses skydivers, said Thursday that it had not issued Kwon a license.

“He was never a member and therefore was never issued a ... license by us,” said Ed Scott, executive director of USPA.

An FAA spokesman said the agency’s investigat­ion includes looking into the instructor’s qualificat­ions. The agency said it does not comment on pending investigat­ions.

After the deadly jump, Parachute Center owner Bill Dause told KCRA-TV that the instructor was an independen­t contractor who had made about 700 jumps.

“The parachute failed to eject properly. We have no explanatio­n why,” Dause said. “The only thing it looks like is something may have gone out of sequence [and] that may have caused the problem.”

When reached by phone Thursday, Dause declined to comment.

FAA regulation­s also include successful­ly completing a tandem instructor course and receiving certificat­ion, which can be met through USPA or the manufactur­er of the tandem equipment used.

The manufactur­ing company, United Parachute Technologi­es, has no record of Kwon, Scott said.

“It’s a very serious red flag. Whether they affiliate with us or not, every business owner should be complying with the aviation regulation­s,” Scott said. “It indicates here in this instance that that had not been met, that that instructor did not meet the regulation­s, possibly others. We don’t know.”

Scott said the organizati­on has begun to look at other instructor­s at Skydive Lodi Parachute Center to see if they meet FAA guidelines.

The FAA has investigat­ed multiple skydiving accidents at the parachutin­g center over the years, said FAA spokesman Ian Gregor.

In 2010, the FAA proposed a $664,000 penalty against Dause for allegedly failing to replace required parts on a DeHavillan­d DHC-6 Twin Otter and comply with airworthin­ess directives. The FAA alleged that more than 2,000 flights were conducted despite parts being “well past their life limits.”

There are 240 skydiving businesses around the U.S. that affiliate with the U.S. Parachute Assn., Scott said.

“In doing so, they pledge to us in writing that they will use USPA-certified instructor­s,” Scott said. “That location was not affiliated with us. We really don’t know what their standard is.”

Dause’s USPA instructor ratings have been suspended by the organizati­on.

“That means he cannot teach a first-jump course, he cannot take a student on a first jump, nor can he act as a coach and train novices,” Scott said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Francine Salazar Turner ?? THIS PHOTO by Francine Salazar Turner shows her son Tyler, 18, kneeling and saying a prayer just before his fatal tandem skydiving jump in Acampo, Calif.
Photograph­s by Francine Salazar Turner THIS PHOTO by Francine Salazar Turner shows her son Tyler, 18, kneeling and saying a prayer just before his fatal tandem skydiving jump in Acampo, Calif.
 ??  ?? TURNER in a family photo with Tyler, who she called adventurou­s.
TURNER in a family photo with Tyler, who she called adventurou­s.

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