Den minner meg om Helios ulykken for mange år siden, men også om den tyske F-104G som havarerte i Nord Norge etter at flygeren ble bevisstløs. (Red.)
Cessna Citation V Drew
F-16 Scramble before Crash
by Kerry Lynch
- June 5, 2023, 11:39 AM
FlightAware captured the
flight path of the Citation V that crashed on June 4. (Image: FlightAware)
The National Transportation Safety Board has
begun investigating the June 4 crash of Cessna 560 Citation V that had drawn
the attention of national security agencies when it flew through secured
airspace with a nonresponsive pilot. All four aboard the aircraft, N611VG,
were killed when it spiraled to the ground at 3:25 p.m. local time near
Staunton, Virginia, in the heart of the Shenandoah Valley between the Blue
Ridge mountains and the Alleghenies.
A 1990 model, the aircraft had been
registered to Encore Motors of Melbourne, Florida, and the owner, John Rumpel,
had told The New York Times and Washington Post that
his daughter, two-year-old granddaughter, her nanny, and a pilot were aboard.
Rumpel had added that his family was returning home to East Hampton after a
visit with him.
The aircraft had departed Elizabethton
Municipal Airport in Tennessee at 1:13 p.m. EDT on a flight to
Islip-Long Island MacArthur Airport in New York. Flight trackers show the
aircraft flying just past the destination but then making a 180-degree
turn over Long Island and heading south at about 1 hour 15 minutes into the
flight.
From there, the aircraft remained on a
straight path for about 50 minutes, crossing over restricted airspace in
Washington, D.C., and prompting security agencies to scramble an F-16
fighter. The Continental U.S. NORAD Region issued a statement that the F-16,
in coordination with the FAA, had been authorized to travel at supersonic
speeds, which caused a sonic boom that was reportedly heard throughout the
region.
The F-16 pilot attempted to establish
communications and used flares to draw attention from the pilot. But these
attempts were unsuccessful. Instead, the aircraft entered a rapid descending
right spiral from 34,000 feet—the cruise altitude that had prevailed through
most of the flight—at an increasing rate of descent followed by another spiral
at 20,000 feet, Air Safety Network (ASN) reported, citing ADS-B data. ASN
added that the last ADS-B return showed an average rate of descent of 28,864
fpm.
AIN was unable to find any previous
depressurization accidents in the NTSB database involving Cessna Citation
560/V/Ultra/Encore twinjets.
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