Divers hope to pull a plane out of the Hudson River on Monday, but their first priority is to recover the bodies of two remaining victims of the air collision that killed nine people, a chief investigator said.
NTSB chief Debbie Hersman told CBS 2 HD on Monday morning that victim recovery is the first priority, as crews work to raise the aircraft they believe they’ve located in a deep part of the river.
“The biggest thing we’d like to do today is make sure that the aircraft that was identified is able to be raised,” said Hersman. “The victim recovery is the first priority. We know that seven victims have been recovered, so the remaining two are the first priority of the day.”
A Pennsylvania family and an Italian tourist group were killed in Saturday’s crash of the small plane and a sightseeing helicopter in the busy skies of Manhattan.
Seven bodies were recovered — one teenage passenger on the plane and all six people aboard the helicopter. Divers resumed their search for the plane’s pilot and an adult passenger on Monday.
“We think we’ve had some positive hits on the skin of the airplane and we’re very hopeful they’ll be able to pull that up today,” Hersman added. “They’ve told us it’s in 50 feet of water, and that will present additional challenges for the divers who have been performing an incredible task.”
An Army Corps of Engineers crane lifted the twisted wreckage of the helicopter from 30 feet of water near the New Jersey shore on Sunday. A sonar scanner found the Piper Lancer nearby and more plane parts were found farther away under about 50 feet of water.
Hersman said that investigators will eventually examine the aircraft’s structural integrity and will try to determine how the initial impact occurred.
Hersman declined to speculate about the cause of the crash, the worst air disaster in New York City since a commercial jet crash in Queens killed 265 people in November 2001. The investigation is expected to take months.
“The NTSB is here to try and figure out how to prevent an accident like this from happening. We’ll be looking at many issues associated with this accident. We can make emergency recommendations,” said Hersman.
A pilot who radioed a desperate, last-minute warning said the plane that struck the helicopter “looked like a cruise missile hitting a target.”
Ben Lane warned fellow helicopter pilot Jeremy Clarke that the plane was bearing down on him.
Lane told the Daily News in Monday’s editions that another pilot heard him scream “Watch out! Watch out!”
He said he doesn’t remember screaming, but does recall seeing a wing and chopper blades falling before both aircraft plummeted.
Lane said a crash was inevitable along the busy corridor. Helicopter pilots stay in constant radio contact, he said, but many small plane pilots do not.
Witnesses said the small plane approached the helicopter, which had just taken off for a 12-minute tour, from behind and clipped it with a wing.
Hersman said the helicopter was gaining altitude at the time the two hit. Both aircraft split apart and fell into the river, scattering debris and sending weekenders enjoying the beautiful day running for cover.
The plane took off from the Teterboro Airport in New Jersey shortly before noon. Hersman said it was not required to have a flight plan and did not file one. The plane was flying at about 1,100 feet at the time of the crash, she said. Below that altitude, planes in that part of the Hudson River corridor are to navigate visually. Above that, they need clearance from air traffic controllers.
One of the Italian victims was a husband celebrating his 25th wedding anniversary, a family friend said. His wife had stayed behind because she was afraid of flying, but their 16-year-old son was in the helicopter.
The five tourists were from the Bologna, Italy, area: Michele Norelli, 51; his son Filippo Norelli, 16; Fabio Gallazzi, 49; his wife, Tiziana Pedroni, 44; and their son Giacomo Gallazzi, 15.
The helicopter company, Liberty Helicopters, released the name of the pilot in the crash: Jeremy Clarke of Lanoka Harbor, N.J. The NTSB said the pilot, originally from New Zealand, was born in 1976 and came to work for Liberty last year. He had about 2,700 hours of flight time.
The plane’s pilot was identified as 60-year-old Steven Altman of Ambler, Pa., a Philadelphia suburb. The passengers were his 49-year-old brother, Daniel Altman of Dresher, Pa., and Daniel’s 16-year-old son, Douglas, officials said. The Altman brothers worked in real estate.
(Source: CBS2 HD)