Because money. Free gibbs."Vanessa Bryant, the widow of late Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, has filed a lawsuit for wrongful death against helicopter company Island Express, which owned the S-76 Sikorsky helicopter in which Kobe, his daughter Gianna, and seven others died during a crash in the hills of Calabasas on Jan. 26"
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Yeah saw that too. Doesn't feel right, but to each their own."Vanessa Bryant, the widow of late Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, has filed a lawsuit for wrongful death against helicopter company Island Express, which owned the S-76 Sikorsky helicopter in which Kobe, his daughter Gianna, and seven others died during a crash in the hills of Calabasas on Jan. 26"
Why?![]()
Not saying he wasn't, but he had previous FAA violations.The pilot was a good pilot.
Yeah saw that too. Doesn't feel right, but to each their own.
TWS would not have saved them. The pilot was clearly in a state of spatial disorientation. The risk of flying is less than that of driving a car, so I wholeheartedly disagree with your statement.Part of flying is accepting the risk that you may crash and die. It sounds harsh but it is what it is. The pilot was a good pilot. The odds where not in that flights favor that day. Sad sure... should the company shell out money because of it. I don't think so. The aircraft did not, to my understanding, have a terrain warning system. I also don't believe it was required by the FAA. So if a terrain warning system could have saved them, wouldn't you sue the FAA for not requiring it? Sounds like a money grab to me.
The risk of flying in a plane is less than that of a car... helicopters are a different story. The statement is true though, you accept the risk that you may crash and die if you fly anything... or if you drive, or boat, or ride a train, a horse. I think you can use your whole heart to agree with that as it is fact.TWS would not have saved them. The pilot was clearly in a state of spatial disorientation. The risk of flying is less than that of driving a car, so I wholeheartedly disagree with your statement.
The pilot made a poor decision by flying SVFR into IMC. I'll put money on it right now that the final NTSB report will cite the causal factor as human error.