Attorney Suing Agency For $10 Million
The past seven days have seen three
rulings placing responsibility for fatal aircraft accidents at
least partly on the shoulders of air traffic controllers, and the
FAA. Now, an attorney is suing the FAA for the loss of three people
in a 2004 accident near Pikeville, KY, claiming the actions of an
air traffic controller were to blame for the fatal crash.
According to the NTSB Probable Cause report, a Beechcraft A36
carrying three persons impacted terrain while on approach to land
at Pikeville Airport (PBX) October 7, 2005 in low IFR conditions.
The aircraft went down about a mile from the runway, to the left of
the approach course to land on runway 27.
Witnesses on the ground reported ceilings of 200-300 feet AGL at
the time of the accident -- right at decision height for the
approach. Lost in the accident were pilot Herman Lester, his wife,
Julie and their son, Max.
The NTSB ruled poor weather conditions and pilot error were the
probable causes of the accident... but attorney Mike DeBourbon says
there's more to the story.
DeBourbon -- who is also PBX Airport Board Chairman -- alleges
the air traffic controller handling the Beech's approach to the
uncontrolled airport brought the plane in too close to the field
for a safe precision approach.
"They brought the aircraft in too early and too high. That
placed the pilot in a situation where he could not land into
Pikeville safely," DeBourbon told WKYT-27.
He is suing the FAA for $10 million, and says if he wins the
money will go to the family's living relatives.
DeBourbon says he listened to recordings of Herman Lester's
conversations with the controller handling his flight, and they
show the controller gave the pilot incorrect information.
"It's not a dangerous situation," DeBourbon told the television
station, of reports of fog and rain at the time of the accident.
"It only becomes dangerous if you place someone in a hurry.
"They brought the aircraft in too early and too high. That
placed the pilot in a situation where he could not land into
Pikeville safely," he added. "Had he not done that, I think the
pilot could have made the landing into Pikeville."
FAA officials said they could not comment on pending
litigation.
As ANN reported, last week
the NTSB ruled the controller handling Scott Crossfield's April
2006 fatal accident flight failed to provide the famed aviator with
timely weather information... which may have contributed to
Crossfield entering an active thunderstorm cell above mountains in
northeast Georgia. The Board issued a similar ruling earlier this
week, on the 2005 crash of a Cessna P337 in Port St. Lucie, FL.
Last Friday, a judge ruled WGN personality Bob Collins was only five-percent at
fault for a 2000 midair accident in the pattern at
Waukegan Airport... levelling the rest of the blame at the FAA and
an air traffic controller.