Archive for: 2008

Offshore Helicopter Crash near Sabine Pass, Texas

Sabine Pass, Texas — The U.S. Coast Guard says three people are dead and two missing following a helicopter crash in the Gulf of Mexico. The helicopter had been on its way to an oil rig. A Coast Guard cutter is at the crash site, about two miles off the Texas coast near the town of Sabine Pass. Aerial searches will resume after sunrise.

A spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in Washington says investigators will work with the Federal Aviation Administration to determine the cause of the crash.

Contact a Helicopter Lawyer

If you have been injured or a loved one has been killed in a helicopter crash, then call us 24/7 for an immediate consultation to discuss the details of the accident and learn what we can do to help protect your legal rights. Whether the accident was caused by negligence on the part of the helicopter owner, hospital or corporation, the manufacturer or due to lack of training, poor maintenance, pilot or operator error, tail rotor failure, sudden loss of power, defective electronics or engine failure or flying in bad weather conditions, we can investigate the case and provide you the answers you need. Call Toll Free 1-800-883-9858 and talk to a Board Certified Trial Lawyer with over 30 years of legal experience or fill out our online form by clicking below:

Italian Sikorsky Helicopter Crash Kills 8

An Italian military Sikorsky HH3F helicopter crashed in eastern France today, killing all on board. The Sikorsky HH3F Helicopter was operated by the Italian coastguard and used as a search and rescue aircraft. The helicopter crashed and exploded in flames.  According to local accident officials, there is no known cause of the crash. The polits and passengers appear to have died instantly in the crash and firey explosion.

The helicopter, which Italian newspapers said had taken off from Rimini, was taking part in a joint Franco-Italian exercise, said the Ministry of Defence in Rome. “It caught fire at 4.30pm local time in open countryside not far from Strasbourg. It was completely destroyed. We still don’t know the causes,” an Italian military spokesman said. There was no immediate word on the identity of the crew and passengers. [Oct 23, 2008]

Chicago Helicopter Crash Kills 4

A medical helicopter crashed today killing all four on board. The medical helicopter was in route to Children’s Memorial Hospital in Chicago from Valley West Hospital when it apparrantly struck a radio station tower guy wire.  The medical ambulance was owned and operated by Air Angles, Inc an emergency medical helicopter / medivac transport company in Bolingbrook, Ilinois.

The air ambulance had a full crew on board including of course the pilot, a nurse and an EMS paramedic. [Oct 16, 2008]

Contact a Helicopter Lawyer

If you have been injured or a loved one has been killed in a helicopter crash, then call us 24/7 for an immediate consultation to discuss the details of the accident and learn what we can do to help protect your legal rights. Whether the accident was caused by negligence on the part of the helicopter owner, hospital or corporation, the manufacturer or due to lack of training, poor maintenance, pilot or operator error, tail rotor failure, sudden loss of power, defective electronics or engine failure or flying in bad weather conditions, we can investigate the case and provide you the answers you need. Call Toll Free 1-800-883-9858 and talk to a Board Certified Trial Lawyer with over 30 years of legal experience or fill out our online form by clicking below:

Houston News Helicopter Crash

KTRK ABC News 13 Helicopter Crash

KTRK, a leading telivision news station in Houston, Texas, reported today that their news helicopter crashed. The helicopter pilot and television camera operator died Monday while on their way to cover a news story. The news helicopter crashed in a wooded area near Conroe, Texas. According to local reports, the crash caused a small fire in the wooded area near the crash.

Wisconsin Helicopter Crash Kills Four

Midwestern Aviation Helicopter Crashes Near Kenosha, Wi

On September 21, 2008 a Robinson R44 II helicopter owned by Midwestern Air Services LLC, was destroyed when it impacted an occupied house and terrain near Kenosha, Wisconsin. A ground fire subsequently occurred. The private pilot and a passenger were fatally injured. The five occupants in the house were uninjured. The flight originated from the Horseshoe Casino Heliport, near Whiting, Indiana, about 0430, and was destined for the Kenosha Regional Airport (ENW), near Kenosha, Wisconsin, when the accident occurred.

A Wisconsin State Patrol Trooper who was outside the weight facility on Interstate 94 at the Illinois and Wisconsin State Line about six miles south of the accident site heard a helicopter heading north at a “very low altitude” and estimated it at 500 feet. He did not see the helicopter or its lights due to the “dense fog.” He stated that the visibility there was about 300 to 500 feet.

Witnesses to Helicopter Crash

A witness who lived near the accident site gave a statement to the Kenosha Police Department. The witness stated that a low flying helicopter was heard. It circled once then went away and came back. The witness saw an orange flash through the window and heard a “boom.” The witness said the helicopter sounded “really low” and the “engine sounded like it was at low RPMs.”

A witness from the occupied house on the northwest corner of 97th Avenue and 70th Street that was impacted by the helicopter gave a statement to the police department. The statement, in part, indicated:

My family and I were fast asleep in our residence when I heard and
felt a loud bang like thunder, and then a cloud of debris came
[through] our bedroom door. My wife and I were in the southeast
bedroom. Our two sons were in the northeast bedroom and our
daughter was the bedroom over the garage. We got our kids and
[with] the help of our neighbors made it down the stairs and outside.
None of us were injured. I saw the flames across the street and one
of our neighbors told me a helicopter hit our house.

Robinson R44 Helicopter Wreckage Found

The main portion of the helicopter wreckage was found on a neighbor’s lawn across 97th Avenue. The helicopter was resting on its left side about 80 feet and about 106 degrees magnetic from the front of the impacted house. A debris path started at the rear of the second floor above the house’s central staircase where the helicopter had come through the roof. The debris path was observed down those central stairs and through the front of the house. The path continued across 97th Avenue and went up to the resting helicopter. The helicopter’s resting heading was about 180 degrees magnetic. The rear and lower portions of the helicopter cabin, inner portions of the fuel tanks, and the transmission between the fuel tanks were deformed and melted by fire. Sections of the main rotor blades remained attached to the rotor hub. The landing skids and crosstube were detached from the fuselage and were found in sections through out the debris path. The tail cone remained attached to the helicopter. The tail rotor gearbox separated from the tailcone. A circular area of lawn around the wreckage exhibited charring and blight. The hour meter read 318.6 hours.

An on-scene investigation was conducted. The engine was rotated by hand and it produced a thumb compression at all of its cylinders. The magnetos and fuel pumps sustained fire damage. The spark plugs were gray to brown in color and did not exhibit any anomalies. The fuel servo’s screen did not contain any debris. The engine’s oil screen did not contain any debris. Both fuel tanks were deformed by fire and contained a liquid with a blue hue. The tail rotor gearbox rotated by hand.
An NTSB investigation is continuing and a final report is not expected for months.

Contact a Helicopter Lawyer

If you have been injured or a loved one has been killed in a helicopter crash, then call us 24/7 for an immediate consultation to discuss the details of the accident and learn what we can do to help protect your legal rights. Whether the accident was caused by negligence on the part of the helicopter owner, hospital or corporation, the manufacturer or due to lack of training, poor maintenance, pilot or operator error, tail rotor failure, sudden loss of power, defective electronics or engine failure or flying in bad weather conditions, we can investigate the case and provide you the answers you need. Call Toll Free 1-800-883-9858 and talk to a Board Certified Trial Lawyer with over 30 years of legal experience or fill out our online form by clicking below:

Maryland Air Ambulance Medical Helicopter Crash

Medevac Helicopter Crash Kills Four of Five

The medical helicopter was carrying victims of a traffic accident when it went down in a suburban Washington park. It is one of the deadliest air ambulance helicopter accidents ever in Maryland and the eighth fatal medical helicopter crash in the last 12 months nationwide. The medical helicopter was headed from the traffic accident to a local hospital when the helicopter was diverted to Andrews Air Force Base late Saturday because of bad weather. As they approached, their runway location was changed and the pilot radioed that he was having trouble assessing his surroundings. The pilot again asked for assistance with the landing, and that was the last air traffic controllers heard from him. The medical helicopter crashed about 1:15 a.m., three miles from the base on 9-28-08.

The NTSB and the FAA are investigating the cause of this tragic crash.

Contact a Helicopter Lawyer

If you have been injured or a loved one has been killed in a helicopter crash, then call us 24/7 for an immediate consultation to discuss the details of the accident and learn what we can do to help protect your legal rights. Whether the accident was caused by negligence on the part of the helicopter owner, hospital or corporation, the manufacturer or due to lack of training, poor maintenance, pilot or operator error, tail rotor failure, sudden loss of power, defective electronics or engine failure or flying in bad weather conditions, we can investigate the case and provide you the answers you need. Call Toll Free 1-800-883-9858 and talk to a Board Certified Trial Lawyer with over 30 years of legal experience or fill out our online form by clicking below:

Tourist Helicopter Crash Kills Four

Tourist / Sightseeing chopper crash kills in Australia. Four people – three of them believed to be tourists – are dead after a helicopter crashed in the Bungle Bungle ranges in Western Australia’s remote Kimberley region. The 40-year-old pilot and three women – one thought to be aged 19 and the other two 20 – were killed when the helicopter went down during a scenic flight to the Purnululu National Park yesterday afternoon. The helicopter burst into flames when it crashed 10km from the Bellburn air strip in the national park, near the Argyle diamond mine.  The crash sparked a bushfire that built into a blaze with a 1km-long front.  Bellburn airstrip, where the helicopter went down, is a bush camp in the park about 55km by air from the township of Warnum, which is also known as Turkey Creek.

The Civil Aviation Safety Authority is investigating this tragic helicopter crash. This crash comes seven months after two people died when a light plane collided with a helicopter over Western Australia’s Gascoyne region. The collision occurred as the two aircraft were conducting a feral goat culling program in the Kennedy Range National Park, 170km east of Carnarvon.

NTSB Report Robinson Helicopter Crash Montana

NTSB Report # DFW08FA218
14 CFR Part 91: General Aviation
Accident occurred Friday, August 29, 2008 in Ridgedale, MO
Aircraft: Robinson R44 II, registration: N41411
Injuries: 2 Fatal. 

On August 29, 2008, at approximately 1615 central standard time (CST), a Robinson R44 II, N41411, registered to and operated by Central Illinois Air Corp as a 14 CFR Part 91 flight, crashed during cruise flight. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and a company flight plan had been filed. The helicopter was substantially damaged by the impact forces and post crash fire. The flight instructor and a private pilot, who were the only occupants, were fatally injured. The helicopter was on a new aircraft delivery flight from Torrance, California to the delivery destination in Mattoon, Illinois, and had departed the Shawnee Municipal Airport (KSNL) Shawnee, Oklahoma en route to an intermediate stop at the West Plains Municipal Airport (KUNO) West Plains, Missouri.

Two witnesses in a small boat approximately a half mile from the crash scene were watching the helicopter in normal cruise when the helicopter descended slightly and then suddenly nosed over in an attitude they demonstrated as approximately 60 degrees nose down. After the descending helicopter passed from their view behind a ridgeline they then heard a “boom” and saw a column of smoke.

The weather reported at the Boone County Airport (KHRO) Harrison, Arkansas at 1553 CST, 17 miles southeast of the accident site, was10 miles visibility with few clouds at 6,000 feet.

Aircraft maintenance documents at the manufacturer’s facility showed the helicopter had accumulated 4.0 hours total time, with an engine total time of 4.0 hours at the time the helicopter departed that facility on August 28, 2008. The initial airworthiness certificate had been issued on August 18, 2008.

The helicopter was recovered to Dawson Aircraft at Clinton, Arkansas, for continued investigation. NOTE: This is preliminary information, subject to change, and may contain errors. Any errors in this report will be corrected when the final report has been completed.

SOURCE: NTSB

California Helicopter Crash NTSB Findings

According to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) the helicopter that crashed on Aug. 5, killing nine and seriously injuring four people, lost power to its main rotor as it was taking off. This preliminary finding explains why witnesses saw the Sikorsky S-61N take off and move more slowly up and forward than usual from the remote helibase. The early NTSB report does not state the reason for the loss of power to the rotor.

The firefighting helicopter, operated by Carson Helicopters was assigned to bring about 50 firefighters out of the Trinity Alps. It had completed two trips, and went to refuel at a helibase in Weaverville and to pick up additional firefighters at the 6,000-foot-elevation backcountry site and was leaving when the nose and rotor struck nearby trees. The chopper crashed and landed onto its side and quickly was consumed by fire.

SOURCE:

Helicopter Terrain Avoidance

What is Terrain Avoidance, and why don’t helicopters use it?

Until the helicopter crash, it was a routine flight. On March 23, 2004, an Era Aviation helicopter was transporting eight crewmembers to the drilling ship Discovery Spirit, 180 miles off the Texan coast in the Gulf of Mexico. Although the weather was clear, the helicopter flew in total darkness during the early night flight, leaving the flight crew with no point of reference over the Gulf. At about 7:30 pm and 70 miles into their journey, the Sikorsky S-76A++ helicopter slammed into the water at full cruising speed, killing both crewmembers and all eight passengers.

What caused the helicopter to crash? A National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigation found that both the pilot and co-pilot were certified and qualified, the helicopter was in perfect working condition (except for its Flight Voice Recorder), and that weather was not a factor.

“The helicopter crashed into the water at a high airspeed, a shallow descent angle, and a near-level roll attitude,” reads the accident report. This led investigators to realize that the cause of the accident was a “controlled flight into terrain.” In other words, the pilots did not notice that they were flying lower and lower until it finally ran out of room and hit the Gulf waters.

Controlled Flight into Terrain

Controlled flight into the terrain is more common than you might think. It sounds almost ridiculous, that trained pilots would simply fly into water, the ground, or the side of a mountain without taking evasive action. But the reality is that controlled flight into terrain or CFIT happens all the time. In the case of the Era Aviation flight described above, the pilots would not have seen their gradual descent into the water because it was pitch black (though they were supposed to be periodically checking their instruments).

In other cases, weather may play a factor. In the case of airplanes, instrument landings during night or bad weather have caused the plane to fly into hills and other objects near the airport.

For these reasons, commercial airliners now use Terrain Avoidance Warning Systems or TAWS. If a plane is flying too low, or is headed towards an object like a mountain, flashing lights and a recorded warning tell the pilots to pull up. These systems have reduced CFIT accidents to almost zero – for those aircraft that have them.

The problem is that private planes and helicopters, both considered to be “Class C” types of aircraft, do not require them. The NTSB report on the March 23, 2004 accident specifically states that: “If a terrain awareness and warning system had been installed aboard the accident helicopter, the system’s aural and visual warning should have provided the flight crew with ample time to recognize that the helicopter was descending toward the water, initiate the necessary corrective actions, and recover from the descent.”

Even EMS helicopters, which as an industry suffers an accident rate approaching military helicopters in combat, do not require TAWS – and most accidents occur at night or in bad weather conditions, and often involve controlled flight into terrain.

Both the NTSB and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) recommend helicopters use a TAWS system. However, the FAA stated that it could not mandate them because “nuisance” alarms would cause too many problems for the lower-flying helicopters. It is looking at ways to implement a helicopter TAWS (or H-TAWS) system, but until use of such devices is mandated, few companies will be willing to invest in this expensive safety feature.

Fault Lies with Operators, Not Government

Yes, government agencies like the FAA are charged with helping ensure that any type of aviation flight is safe. But ultimately it is up to the operators to ensure the safety of their helicopter flights.

If you or a loved one has been injured in a helicopter crash, contact the Willis Firm right now for free and professional advice about your legal rights. You may be entitled to compensation to cover medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. But nobody is going to just give it to you. Get David P. Willis fighting on your side to ensure you get the settlement you deserve.