Wednesday, September 9, 2015

The crew of a jet that crashed in Massachusetts last year, killing Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz and six others, did not perform a pre-flight check


NTSB: Crew neglected pre-flight check in crash that killed Inquirer co-owner, 6 others







By MARK PRATT Associated Press
Updated 1 hr 26 mins ago

BOSTON -- Federal investigators say the crew of a jet that crashed in Massachusetts last year, killing Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz and six others, did not perform a pre-flight check and failed to disengage a safety mechanism before takeoff.

The National Transportation Safety Board announced the results Wednesday of the investigation into the May 2014 crash in Bedford, Mass.

The Gulfstream G-IV business jet overran the runway, crashed into a ravine and caught fire.








Pictured: The scene of a plane crash that killed Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz and 6 other in Massachusetts.

The NTSB said the crew engaged a device that prevents control surfaces from moving when the jet is parked, but did not disengage it before takeoff.

The system was meant to prevent the throttle from being moved more than 6 degrees, but the throttle was moved almost four times that amount.

Katz was a philanthropist and businessman who once co-owned the New Jersey Nets and New Jersey Devils.









As Drew Katz speaks, during a memorial service for his father, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett wipes his eye Matt Rourke