Brazilian Minister Repeats: American Pilots Should Have Stuck to Flight Plan

Brazilian Defense minister, Waldir Pires, criticized statements made by the owners of ExcelAire, the New-York-based air-taxi company, whose plane collided with a Boeing 737 over the Amazon jungle causing Brazil’s worst air accident ever.

Pires was reacting to a press release issued by the American company in which they blame the Brazilian air traffic controllers for the September 29 accident, which left 154 people dead. These statements, say the Brazilian minister, are "absolutely inadequate."

ExcelAire, in its note, said that it’s premature to blame its pilots, Joseph Lepore and Jan Paul Paladino for the tragedy. The company was responding to charges of negligence contained in two lawsuits filed in US courts by American lawyers on behalf of the families of the victims who died in the crash. 

In one of the judicial proceedings, attorney Manuel von Ribbeck writes that the ExcelAire’s pilots "did not adopt the needed precautions and acted in a careless and negligent manner." 

Ribbeck also said that at the time of the collision, the Legacy’s pilots were not in the altitude determined by the flight plan. Moreover, the suit contends, they weren’t able to adequately operate the TCAS [the anti-collision system] or to maintain the necessary communication with the Brazilian Air Traffic Control."

Robert Torricella, the American lawyer representing ExcelAire, had stated in the company’s press release: "In the face of recent confirmations that air traffic control cleared and directed the ExcelAire Legacy Jet to fly to Manaus at 37,000 feet, repeated suggestions that ExcelAire’s pilots were flying at the wrong altitude are baseless,"

And added: "According to international aviation regulations and norms, air traffic control directives take precedence over a written flight plan and those directives effectively amend the written flight plan. It is the flight plan cleared by air traffic control at the time of departure – and not the prior written flight plan – that governs the conduct of the flight."

According to minister Pires, however, the American pilots should have stuck to their original flight plan whatever was told them  by the air controllers:

"The control tower, usually, cares about the plane’s take off and its final destination, but it’s not the tower that determined altitudes and the course of things. This is determined by the flight plan. And, in the flight plan, obviously, was written that the plane should march (sic) at 37,000 feet from São José dos Campos through Brasí­lia and that in Brasí­lia it should descend to 36,000 feet."

Lepore and Paladino have been detained in Rio de Janeiro. Their passports were confiscated by the Rio Federal Police. The Legacy plane, which as involved in the accident, also cannot leave the country.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Elections in Quibocó

Mardoqueu is made out of fine French bread dough. White and lean like a ...

Brazil’s First Job Program Includes Youths from Quilombos

For the first time youths who reside in Quilombos will be included in the ...

Brazil Puts the Brake on Growth to Avoid Inflation

The Selic, Brazil's reference key interest rate. will only begin to fall when inflation ...

Brazilian State Companies Invest US$ 14.5 Billion, a 6% Growth

Brazil's state-owned or controlled companies were sailing on calm waters in the first eight ...

Markets: Another Red Day for Brazil

Brazilian and Latin America receipts posted modest declines, as strength in U.S. markets was ...

Short story – fall guy

malu is something else, fine people are another story. as the old of issás ...

Dramatic Jump in Brazil’s Dairy Exports

Through August of this year, Brazil exported more dairy products than it did in ...

Brazil Blames US’s and EU’s Stinginess for Environmental Conference Failure

Brazil participated Monday, February 6, in the final day of the Special Session of ...

Brazil Sounds: Stalking Veloso and Gil’s Ghosts in London

During the years Brazilian composers Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil spent in London they ...

It’s Time Brazil Leave Its Pothole-Filling Policy and Strive for Greatness

Recently I visited the Cariri region, in the interior of Ceará State, to take ...