Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fatal flight with fugitives was overweight: TSB

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2022 02:34 PM
  • Fatal flight with fugitives was overweight: TSB

The Transportation Safety Board says a small plane that crashed in northern Ontario with two fugitives on board was overweight and the pilot was not qualified to fly at night. 

Flight records and witnesses have said the Piper Cherokee began its journey from British Columbia and made several stops before crashing near Sioux Lookout, Ont. 

Police have said pilot Abhinav Handa, Hankun Hong, Gene Lahrkamp and Duncan Bailey died in the crash near Sioux Lookout after departing from Dryden, Ont.

British Columbia's anti-gang unit has said Lahrkamp was wanted in Thailand for murdering another man with links to B.C. gangs, while court records have shown a man with the same name and age as Bailey was wanted by police for breaching bail conditions related to a separate murder plot in B.C. 

The TSB says the single-engine aircraft was 170 pounds over its maximum takeoff weight when it crashed, but it does not say whether or what cargo was on board. 

It also says the pilot had not logged enough night flights to carry passengers after dark, nor was he qualified to fly in weather conditions that would require navigation using an instrument because of reduced visibility. 

The TSB says its investigation was conducted for the purpose of advancing transportation safety, not to assign fault or determine civil or criminal liability. 

The report says the plane left Dryden's regional airport at 9 p.m. on April 29 and was reported missing about four and a half hours later. An emergency locator transmitter activated on impact and the signal assisted search and rescue services in finding the accident site.

The plane crashed after dark, striking trees in a heavily wooded area, the report says. It was out of control when it hit the forest canopy at a 90-degree angle and came to rest about 100 feet from the first trees that it struck. 

All four men were fatally injured. 

"The airframe broke apart in a manner consistent with a cartwheeling motion, and both fuel cells ruptured," it says. 

Weather reports suggested broken cloud layers, light rain and fog. 

Before departing, the pilot filed a flight plan with Nav Canada, which operates flight information centres across the country. During the call, a flight service specialist gave a short weather briefing and suggested marginal visual flight rules could be present, the report says. 

Flying under visual flight rules means a pilot needs to use visual cues — watching the ground or horizon, for example — to steer the plane. 

Doing so at night can be particularly challenging and the report says this flight would not likely have met the requirements to operate under visual flight rules.

"Instead, such a flight would require pilots to rely on their flight instruments to ensure safe operation of the aircraft," it says.

Neither the pilot nor the passenger next to him, who also had a commercial pilot licence, was certified to fly under instrument flight rules, it says. 

No defects were identified in the aircraft and the engine was found to be operating normally, the report says. 

No signs of carburetor icing were found, but the report says that could have happened under the weather conditions at the time. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver approves Broadway redevelopment

Vancouver approves Broadway redevelopment
Councillors voted seven to four in support of the plan to add up to 30,000 homes along a six-kilometre, 16-block wide strip serving Vancouver General Hospital, City Hall and hundreds of businesses, shops, restaurants and schools.

Vancouver approves Broadway redevelopment

Province stops museum plan, will consult public on museum’s future

Province stops museum plan, will consult public on museum’s future
Public engagement will seek input on what British Columbians want to see in a modernized museum experience. It will also address structural and safety issues identified with the current buildings.

Province stops museum plan, will consult public on museum’s future

Liberals say faith in RCMP commissioner strong

Liberals say faith in RCMP commissioner strong
A report published Tuesday by the inquiry investigating the tragedy includes notes from an RCMP superintendent alleging Lucki said she had promised Blair and the Prime Minister's Office that information on the guns used by the shooter would be released as it affected pending gun control legislation.    

Liberals say faith in RCMP commissioner strong

Ex-employees sue Musk-run Tesla for mass layoffs

Ex-employees sue Musk-run Tesla for mass layoffs
The world's richest man said that the electric car-maker will cut salaries by 10 per cent over the next three months, as the company navigates the global macro-economic conditions. This would result in reducing Tesla's total headcount by roughly 3.5 per cent.

Ex-employees sue Musk-run Tesla for mass layoffs

Trucker Jaskirat Singh Sidhu deportation case could go to court for Broncos crash

Trucker Jaskirat Singh Sidhu deportation case could go to court for Broncos crash
The Canada Border Services Agency recommended in March that Jaskirat Singh Sidhu be handed over to the Immigration and Refugee Board to decide if he should be deported back to India.

Trucker Jaskirat Singh Sidhu deportation case could go to court for Broncos crash

Canadians confident in U.S., less in Biden: poll

Canadians confident in U.S., less in Biden: poll
In the Pew Research Center survey released Wednesday, only 61 per cent of Canadian respondents said they have confidence in President Joe Biden to do the right thing on the world stage — a steep decline from the 77 per cent who said the same thing in 2021.

Canadians confident in U.S., less in Biden: poll