Feds suggest check not done before fatal jet crash

BOB SALSBERG
Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) — The crew of a private jet that crashed in Massachusetts, killing Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz and six other people, did not perform a flight control check before attempting takeoff, a federal report issued Friday suggests.

The preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board on the May 31 crash at Hanscom Field outside Boston also indicated a possible problem with a mechanical gust lock system on the Gulfstream IV, which protects aircraft components from wind damage while planes are parked.

The plane would have been unable to take off had the lock been engaged, according to aviation experts.

Pilots typically check wing flaps, elevators and other components before takeoff to make sure they are working. The flight data recorder would be expected to have recorded such checks, but investigators found no evidence of such movement, the report stated.

The report did not identify a probable cause for the crash, and officials have said a final report could take months to complete.

NTSB investigators previously said data from the jet’s flight data recorders indicated it reached takeoff speed but never lifted off before it went off a runway, crashed into a gulley and burst into flames. Cockpit voice recordings revealed comments from the crew concerning “aircraft control,” the NTSB said.

According to the preliminary report, flight data showed evidence that the gust lock was engaged during the taxi and attempted takeoff, though a physical examination of the wreckage found the handle that locks the device was in the “off” position.

“There is some evidence that there was a problem with the gust lock system,” said aviation consultant John Cox, a former pilot and accident investigator.

Crew members, however, may not have been aware of the issue without a flight check.

If controls were locked or stuck, “those things would normally be found in a flight control check prior to takeoff,” said John Gadzinski, an airline captain and aviation safety consultant. “We know one thing that definitely wasn’t moving as planned was the elevator, which is necessary to rotate the aircraft (to lift the nose up).”

There was no evidence of catastrophic engine failure, the NTSB report said.

Flight data also indicated a rise in brake pressure and that the crew engaged thrust reversers, suggesting a desperate attempt by the crew to stop the aircraft after the failed takeoff.

Katz, 72, a former co-owner of the New Jersey Nets and New Jersey Devils, had gone to Massachusetts on May 31 to attend an education-related event at the Concord home of historian Doris Kearns Goodwin with three friends who also died in the crash in nearby Bedford: Anne Leeds, a 74-year-old retired preschool teacher; Marcella Dalsey, the director of Katz’s son’s foundation; and Susan Asbell, 67, the wife of a former New Jersey county prosecutor.

The three crew members who died were chief pilot James McDowell, co-pilot Bauke “Mike” de Vries and flight attendant Teresa Benhoff.

Both pilots had substantial experience and completed a Gulfstream review course and proficiency check in September, the report said.

Aircraft maintenance records showed the plane had operated for nearly 5,000 hours with 2,745 landings, the NTSB said.

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Associated Press writer Joan Lowy in Washington contributed to this report.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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