Her kan man ikke unngå å nevne flygeren Andreas Lubitz som drepte seg selv og 149 andre i 2008. Han hadde et mentalt problem som var kjent for hans lege, men han hadde taushetsplikt. (Red.)
Oregon incident shows pilots in mental
distress can slip by FAA; ‘A major problem’ says expert
·
Updated: Oct.
26, 2023, 5:05 p.m.|
·
Published: Oct.
25, 2023, 5:43 p.m.
Joseph David Emerson, 44, was arraigned in Multnomah County Circuit Court on Tues., Oct. 24, 2023. Dave Killen / The Oregonian
By
·
Aimee Green |
The Oregonian/OregonLive
Joseph
David Emerson, the off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot who is charged with
trying to crash a jetliner in
Oregon while riding a jumpseat in the cockpit, had piloted another commercial
aircraft just three days earlier.
The terrifyingly close
proximity of the two events – Emerson sitting at the controls of his own
jetliner on Thursday and Emerson allegedly leaping out of the jumpseat in an
attempt to crash a Horizon plane by pulling emergency fuel cutoff handles
Sunday – underscores gaping holes in the public safety net that allow pilots in
mental distress to remain at the helm of massive aircraft.
“That could be
devastating,” said Joseph Gutheinz Jr., a Texas lawyer who in previous roles
investigated pilots suspected of lying about their mental health for federal
agencies. “The bottomline: This is a major problem.”
After last working on
Thursday, Emerson told Port of Portland police who took him into custody at
Portland International Airport that he was having a “nervous breakdown” and had
used “magic mushrooms” 48 hours earlier, which would have been Friday evening.
He also said he hadn’t slept in the past 40 hours, which would have been
approximately since 2 a.m. Saturday morning.
Emerson told police that
he had been battling depression and he’d been struggling to come to terms with
the death of a close friend, though it’s unclear whether his employer or the
Federal Aviation Administration were aware. An Alaska Airlines spokesperson said
Wednesday that she was “unable to share any private employment details.” The
FAA didn’t respond to questions from The Oregonian/OregonLive.
Gutheinz said he wouldn’t
be surprised if Emerson hid his struggles from them – or even if he didn’t and
he was allowed to continue flying.
“There are people that fly
sick …and they represent a threat to the flying public and to the people on the
ground,” Gutheinz said. “And the FAA is basically an absentee landlord when it
comes to protecting the public.”
He
added that an airplane is the equivalent of “a flying bomb.” According to the FAA,
tens of thousands of flights safely take off or land daily at U.S. airports.
They transport close to 3 million passengers. The last fatal U.S. airlines
passenger crash was in 2009 in
New York, killing all 49 people on board and one person on the ground.
The FAA states that most
mental health conditions “if treated, do not disqualify a pilot from flying.”
But some, including psychosis and bipolar disorder, automatically do.
In
August, an investigation by The Washington Post found
that nearly 5,000 pilots are suspected of falsifying medical records to hide
benefits they’ve been receiving for mental illness or other health problems
that might make them hazards on the job.
FAA
regulations require that pilots undergo medical examinations every
six months to five years, depending on the type of aircraft they operate and
their age. But aviation experts say those with mental health or other problems
sometimes conceal them, out of fear they will be cut off from flying.
The FAA says it takes
mental health concerns seriously and has been trying to reduce the stigma
pilots feel in reporting depression and other difficulties they’re facing.
In a statement posted
to its website, Alaska Airlines said Emerson’s medical certification had never
been “denied, suspended or revoked.”
One of Emerson’s defense
attorneys, Noah Horst, said he and his colleagues will “pursue a diligent
investigation into all the facts and circumstances” leading up to Sunday’s
events.
“Joseph Emerson is a
caring father, a loving husband, and a skilled aviator who is supported and
loved by a vast network of friends, family, and colleagues,” Horst said in an
email. “He would never intentionally hurt another person. Joe was not under the
influence of any intoxicants when he boarded that flight.”
Emerson, who lives in the
Bay Area of California, remains in Multnomah County Jail.
He faces 83 counts of
attempted murder and one count of first-degree endangering aircraft in
Multnomah County Circuit Court. He also faces federal charges, which he will
hear during his arraignment Thursday.
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