Report confirms
pilot’s blood alcohol was 5 times over limit
The National
Transportation Safety Board confirmed an Alaska airplane pilot involved in
a fatal crash had a blood-alcohol level more than five times above the
legal limit for pilots to fly.
The final NTSB
crash report said pilot Charles Weimer was flying under the influence when
he failed to maintain a safe distance from Goat Mountain in August 2019,
KTUU-TV reported Saturday.
“We had some
indicators that maybe this was going to be the case,” said Clint Johnson,
National Transportation Safety Board Alaska office chief. “But until we got
that toxicology report back anything could be the case.”
Weimer, 31, and
three others died in the crash near Girdwood.
The airplane’s
owner, Karl Erickson, 55, and David Osborn, 60, both of Girdwood, and Paul
Wiley, 37, of Superior, Arizona, were also killed.
The Piper
PA-22-150 aircraft left Girdwood at about 4:15 p.m. and crashed 15 minutes
later in steep terrain on the mountain, investigators said.
A witness saw the
plane performing aggressive maneuvers before the crash, the NTSB report
said.
“I think that
everyone would agree that this an avoidable accident, no doubt about that,”
Johnson said.
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