Amazon Turboprop Crash
Kills 10
Nine hydroelectric workers and the
pilot died when an air taxi crashed on approach to the Monte Dourado airfield at
Almeirim in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest on March 12. The EMB 820 Carajá, an
Embraer-built version of the Piper Navajo powered by a pair Pratt & Whitney
PT-6A-27 turboprops, had been operated by air taxi firm Fretax since 2010. The
only pilot aboard, José Carlos Jr., 28, left Belém at 7 p.m. and the accident is
estimated to have occurred about 8:26 p.m. after the aircraft, tail number
PT-VAQ, announced its approach and then failed to make further radio contact.
The wreckage was found on the morning of March 13 almost three miles from the
runway in a reforestation area. The identities of the victims, all Brazilian
workers for contractor CESBE, one of the builders of the Santo Antônio do Jirau
dam in the neighboring state of Amapá, will be determined by DNA analysis.
Brazil’s civil aviation authority, ANAC, suspended Fretax’s operating license on
March 14. A Brazilian charter industry source told AIN, “For a Part 135
flight with passengers, a copilot is always required.” The aircraft’s paperwork
was up to date, and Fretax claimed that the pilot’s licenses were also in order
and that the engines had recently undergone maintenance. Investigation agency
Cenipa said it is too early to determine the cause
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