Guilty Plea in Oregon in 2008 Fatal Copter Crash
An Oregon man has pleaded guilty to fraud in
connection with the deadliest helicopter crash involving working firefighters in
U.S. history.
Levi Phillips, 46, of Grants Pass faces up to 20 years in
prison when he is sentenced in April. As part of a plea deal, he agreed to
testify against another man, 42-year-old Steven Metheny of Central
Point.
Phillips was the director of maintenance for Carson Helicopters
Inc., reporting directly to Metheny, a former vice president.
Prosecutors
say that when the U.S. Forest Service solicited bids for helicopters to be used
in firefighting operations, Metheny submitted proposals with altered performance
charts and falsified weight and balance records. Then, after winning the $20
million contract, the incorrect information was given to pilots who had to
calculate the maximum payload capacity during firefighting
operations.
The Aug. 5, 2008, crash near Weaverville, Calif., killed the
pilot, a Forest Service safety inspector and seven firefighters with Grayback
Forestry of Merlin. The co-pilot and three firefighters were hurt. Witnesses
said the helicopter took off more slowly than normal before clipping trees and
then crashing into a hillside.
A National Transportation Safety Board
investigation showed the Sikorsky S-61N helicopter weighed more than 19,000
pounds when pilots tried to take off from a mountaintop clearing during the Iron
44 wildfire in Shasta-Trinity National Forest. If Forest Service guidelines had
been followed, investigators said, the weight shouldn't have exceeded 15,840
pounds.
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