The Arizona Republic

Copter pilot not OK’d for bad weather

- Michael R. Sisak and Karen Matthews

NEW YORK – The pilot killed Monday when his helicopter slammed into the roof of a New York City skyscraper was not authorized to fly in limited visibility, according to his pilot certificat­ion, raising questions about why he took off in fog and steady rain.

Tim McCormack, 58, was only certified to fly under regulation­s known as visual flight rules, which require generally good weather and clear conditions, according to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

The rules require at least 3 miles of visibility and that the sky is clear of clouds for daytime flights. The visibility at the time of Monday’s crash was about 1¼ miles at nearby Central Park, with low clouds blanketing the skyline.

McCormack was not certified to use instrument­s to help fly through cloudy or bad weather, the FAA said.

The crash in the tightly controlled airspace of midtown Manhattan shook the 750-foot AXA Equitable building, obliterate­d the Agusta A109E helicopter, sparked a fire and forced office workers to flee.

It briefly triggered memories of 9/11 and fears of a terrorist attack, but authoritie­s said there is no indication the crash was deliberate.

Investigat­ors were reviewing video posted on social media Monday afternoon showing a helicopter that investigat­ors believe is the doomed chopper pausing and hovering a short distance south of the heliport, then turning and making an erratic flight back north through rain and clouds.

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