Pilot 'rolled back throttle' in fatal helicopter
crash
14-year-old sole survivor shares memory of crash with
federal investigators
The wreckage of a crashed Airbus AS350-B3e is seen
near Lituya Bay in early October in a photo provided by the National
Transportation Safety Board.
The sole survivor of a fatal helicopter
crash has given federal investigators their first insight into the event that
killed three people Sept. 28.
In a preliminary report issued Wednesday,
investigator Joshua Lindberg wrote that the 14-year-old passenger said the pilot
"reached down and rolled the throttle off" before the accident and that the
helicopter entered a free fall from about 500 feet up. The passenger said the
pilot increased throttle before the accident, but that the helicopter still hit
the beach near Lituya Bay. The passenger remembers the impact and water
splashing into the wreck, but he then fell unconscious.
It was not clear
which of the helicopter's two pilots adjusted the throttle.
The passenger
doesn't know what the pilot's actions mean, Lindberg said, and "at this point,
neither do we."
According to information initially provided to the U.S.
Coast Guard and the National Park Service (then subsequently confirmed by the
NTSB), the crashed helicopter was an Airbus AS350-B3e en route from the factory
in Grand Prairie Texas to Anchorage. It had taken off from Juneau and was headed
to Yakutat as part of its ferry flight when it crashed on a beach in Glacier Bay
National Park.
Fifty-three-year-old Palmer resident David King,
42-year-old Anchorage resident Joshua Pepperd and 11-year-old Andrew Pepperd
were killed in the crash. Fourteen-year-old Aiden Pepperd was found injured but
alive by the U.S. Coast Guard after the accident.
While Alaska has the
highest aviation accident rate in the country, according to Federal Aviation
Administration statistics, this crash is somewhat unusual in that it involves a
new aircraft with two pilots aboard, Lindberg said. For insurance purposes, King
had been hired as a safety pilot to accompany the flight.
According to
the NTSB report, which was based on GPS recordings, the helicopter left Juneau
and traveled over Glacier Bay at 3,000-4,000 feet before following the coastline
about 500 to 700 feet above the ground. The last GPS reading had the helicopter
at 500 feet.
Investigators arrived at the wreckage two days after the
accident, but the tide had washed away some of the debris, Lindberg said. While
part of the instrument panel was among the pieces washed away, the NTSB did
recover the engine data recorder, engine control unit and a camera that
monitored the instruments and the pilot's actions.
All of the recorders
were taken to Washington, D.C. for analysis.
Lindberg said finding the
cause of the crash will take time. How much time depends on the course of the
investigation, but a ballpark figure is 12 to 18 months.
"The reason that
those take so long is that there's a lot of information to process," he said.
"There's a lot that goes into an accident like this."
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