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Crew and ATC Cited in Learjet Crash
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The NTSB today concluded that a combination of flight crew and ATC deficiencies led to a controlled flight into terrain accident involving an air ambulance
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The NTSB today concluded that a combination of flight crew and ATC deficiencies led to a controlled flight into terrain accident involving an air ambulance
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The NTSB today concluded that a combination of flight crew and ATC deficiencies led to a controlled flight into terrain accident involving an air ambulance Learjet 35A near San Diego on Oct. 24, 2004. The captain, copilot and three medical crewmembers were killed in the 12:30 a.m. crash. The Board determined that the probable cause of the accident was the flight crew’s failure to follow recommended procedures for departing at night in VMC and ATC’s issuance of a clearance that “transferred the responsibility for terrain clearance from the flight crew to the controller.” Additionally, the NTSB cited ATC’s failure to “provide terrain clearance instructions to the flight crew, and failure to advise the flight crew of minimum safe altitude warning alerts.” Contributing to the accident was the pilots’ fatigue, “which likely contributed to their degraded decision making,” the Board stated. “At the time of the accident, the captain had been awake about 17.5 hours, and the copilot had been awake about 16 hours, and both pilots had accumulated about 11 hours duty time.” The NTSB noted that although the duty and rest times of both flight crewmembers were in compliance with Part 135, the accident flight departed about three hours past both crewmembers’ normal bedtimes at the end of a long duty day.

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