In the final chaotic moments before Air France flight 447 crashed
into the Atlantic Ocean in 2009, it took the captain of the aircraft,
who was on a scheduled break, more than a minute to return to the
cockpit, despite his two co-pilots’ frantic calls for help, black box
recordings showed.
Although it was never revealed what delayed Capt. Marc D., two
independent sources told ABC News that the 58-year-old veteran Air
France pilot was traveling socially with an off-duty Air France flight
attendant named Veronique G..
Jean-Paul Troadec, the director of BEA, the French authority
conducting the investigation into the Flight 447 crash, told ABC News
that G. was not part of their investigation because the agency was
“not interested” in the “private life of the pilot.” Troadec added that
he did not think the captains alleged relations with G. aboard the
plane would have played a role in the accident.
Air France 447 was on an overnight trip from Rio de Janiero to Paris
on May 31, 2009 when it vanished. The plane crashed into the Atlantic
Ocean in the early morning hours of June 1, 2009.
Three years after the accident, a final report has now finally been released, explaining what happened that night at 38,000 feet. Black box tapes recovered from the wreckage two years after the crash, in April
2011, revealed that Capt. D. left the cockpit for a scheduled nap
about four hours into the flight, around the same time Flight 447 was
about to enter a severe thunderstorm which other flights had avoided.
Once in the storm, the plane’s pitot tube, a critical piece of
equipment that tells the pilot the aircraft’s air speed, failed, likely
from ice crystals forming on it, according to BEA officials who
inspected the wreckage. When the pitot tube fails, the Airbus A330′s
automatic pilot system disengages, shifting control back to the pilot.
According to the tapes, First Officer Cedric B., a 32-year-old
pilot who had fewer than 5,000 flight hours under his belt, was at the
controls but had never been in this situation before at high altitude. He made the fatal mistake of pulling the plane’s nose up, which
caused it to go into a deep stall.
Within seconds, the plane was plummeting about 120 miles an hour in the dark, belly first, with the nose slightly elevated.
“It seems that the pilots did not understand the situation and they were not aware that they had stalled,” Troadec said.
The co-pilots asked where the captain was and called for help several
times before Captain D. returned to the cockpit, the black box tapes
showed. When Captain D. burst in, he found a scene of utter confusion.
“What’s happening?” D. was heard saying on the black box recordings.
“I don’t know what’s happening,” one of the co-pilots replied.
“I have a problem…I have no more displays,” D. said.
They never regained control of the plane, and in the confusion,
co-pilot Cedric B. thought his instruments were wrong. He was so
befuddled that he was heard asking, “Am I going down now?”
All 228 passengers and crew aboard Air France flight 447 were killed.
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