Brazil Boeing Tragedy: US Pilots Blamed by Colleagues for Series of Blunders

Brazil's executive Legacy jet with damaged wing The day after Brazilian most-read daily Folha de S. Paulo published a transcript of the conversations of the American pilots who flew the executive Legacy jet that collided against a Boeing 737, killing all 154 people aboard, in which the proficiency of the pilots is put in doubt, Theo Dias, the Brazilian lawyer for the US duo was in damage control mode.

For Dias, the analysis of Joseph Lepore and Jan Paladino's dialogues published by Folha cannot be considered an indication that they were unprepared or had little experience in piloting the Legacy.

"When you read the conversations, which were transcribed in a truncated way and very badly translated, everything gets the wrong dimension. The pilots were never lost and they had enough familiarity with an airplane like that one. The rest are just assumptions."

The pilots' lawyer blames the São José dos Campos control tower, the place from where the Legacy took off on its maiden voyage. He says that the São José tower should have given the pilots all the procedures they should follow until they reached Manaus, in the Amazonas state, before authorizing their take off.

Brazilian pilots heard by O Estado de S. Paulo told that paper, based on what they read in the transcripts, that Lepore and Paladino showed that they were unprepared to fly the Legacy and didn't know how to operate the equipment of the small jet.

According to them, the American pilots didn't plot correctly the flight plan in their FMS (Flight Management System), an equipment that helps pilots plan their flights. "They couldn't even configure the flight plan," said a commercial plane commander.

The pilots are criticized for not knowing the plane's manual especially the trouble shooting (TX) section of the book. One of the US pilots is heard saying in the transcript: "I don't know what TX 35 means."

For another Brazilian pilot, the Americans didn't seem to have any familiarity with the navigation instruments. "This is something basic," he told O Estado, "but it seems as if they had trouble even using the radio. If they had plotted the flight plan data correctly, they would know that they were flying in the wrong altitude. The flight controllers, however, are in part responsible since they should have alerted about this."

The black box recording shows Lepore and Paladino angry at the São José dos Campos flight controllers for letting they take off without giving them more details. "We were trying to get an altitude before leaving and this happened. This way is tough," one of them says.

To what a retired commander commented: "At each stage of the flight there is a check-list to assist pilots. Apparently they didn't use it. This is aviation's ABC. It wasn't only one blooper but several of them."

Tags:

You May Also Like

NGO Accuses Nestlí© of Scoffing at Brazil’s Law

Since the beginning of its activities in Parque das Àguas (Park of Waters) in ...

If Brazil’s Bankrupt Varig Is Sold 7,500 Workers Would be Fired and 40 Planes Retired

Luiz Roberto Ayoub, the judge who presides in the Rio de Janeiro business court ...

US Called Immoral Polluter by Protesters in Brazil

Representatives of social movements, unions, and environmental organizations protested in front of the American ...

Brazil’s International Organic Fair Exceeds Expectations

The BioFach América Latina 2004, the continent’s biggest organic product fair, ended on Friday ...

Doha, Qatar, Will Soon Be Home to Over 1,000 Brazilians

Seven hundred additional Brazilians will move to Qatar, in the Middle East, by March ...

Brazil Embraer’s Net Income Goes Up, While Net Sales Go Down

Embraer, Brazilian aircraft manufacturer, had a net income of US$ 83 million in the ...

Brazil Spending US$ 160 Million for Nuclear Sub to Protect Oil Fields

The Brazilian government should spend US$ 160 million by the end of next year ...

Brazil President Meets with Plaza de Mayo Mothers in Buenos Aires

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff in her first overseas trip as chief of state ratified ...

What’s There to Celebrate?

In the 1970s, Brazilian blacks delved into history and rediscovered black resistance leader Zumbi ...

Lula’s Going to Iran So Iraq’s Story Won’t Repeat There, He Says

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, president of Brazil, said that he will visit Iran ...