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Sun, Dec 17, 2006

US Pilots Lepore And Paladino Deny Wrongdoing

Pair Involved In Brazil Crash Make First Public Appearance

Joseph Lepore and Jan Paladino are thankful they made it home in time for the holidays, but remain adamant they were following ATC instructions when the bizjet they were flying collided with a Gol Airlines 737 over the Amazon jungle last September.

The two spoke publicly about the incident for the first time Friday on NBC's "Today" show. They claim they never saw the 737 and didn't learn of the collision until hours after they safely landed the damaged Embraer Legacy 600 they were delivering to the US.  The bizjet lost a winglet and suffered damage to its tail.

Lepore said after they landed they immediately asked authorities if another aircraft had issued a distress call.

Brazilian police formally charged the pair before returning their passports and allowing them to leave the country late last week. As ANN reported, they are accused of "endangering air safety." A preliminary report says a "lack of caution" on the part of Lepore and Paladino contributed to the crash and suggested the disaster could have been avoided if they had noticed their aircraft's transponder was off.

The two aircraft collided at 37,000 feet, an altitude normally reserved by ICAO guidelines for eastbound aircraft. Lepore and Paladino were flying on a northwesterly heading and wouldn't normally have been at that altitude, but Paladino said they were flying at an altitude assigned by ATC, adding, "Air traffic controllers have responsibility to manage that traffic."

The continuing investigation into the accident suggests after the collision the Gol 737 experienced a catastrophic failure of the wing which impacted the bizjet. The airliner crashed in the jungle killing all 154 aboard.

"We were compliant with all regulations," Paladino said. "We were doing exactly what we were supposed to be doing, and we just experienced, automatically, just a jolt out of nowhere."

Many international aviation groups have condemned Brazil's decision to criminalize the crash investigation saying such action serves to work against efforts to improve aviation safety.

Lepore and Paladino must return to Brazil to answer the criminal charges. If found guilty of willfully endangering air safety they face up to 12 years in prison.

FMI: www.brasilemb.org

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