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Bryant Crash Copter Didn’t Have ‘Black Box’ Recorders, NTSB Says

Bryant Crash Copter Didn’t Have ‘Black Box’ Recorders, NTSB Says

(Bloomberg) -- The helicopter on which Kobe Bryant and eight other people died Sunday wasn’t equipped with crash-proof voice and data recorders, investigators said Monday night.

The Sikorsky S-76B helicopter carrying Bryant, his daughter and seven others wasn’t required to have the so-called black boxes, National Transportation Safety Board member Jennifer Homendy said at the agency’s first briefing since the accident.

Bryant Crash Copter Didn’t Have ‘Black Box’ Recorders, NTSB Says

The pilot of the aircraft requested permission to climb to avoid a cloud layer and then made a descending turn and struck a hillside, Homendy said. An air-traffic controller radioed back to the pilot asking him what he planned to do and there was no reply.

Homendy added she was confident the cause of the crash in the hills of Calabasas, California, near Los Angeles would be determined. She said the scene of the crash was “pretty devastating,” and added that debris was strewn up and down the hillside, covering about 500 to 600 feet.

The death of Bryant, a retired star of the National Basketball Association’s Los Angeles Lakers, stunned the nation.

Among the other victims was another parent and a teammate from Gianna’s travel sports team.

Preliminary reports indicate the pilot was confused or was reacting to some unusual condition as it climbed and turned away from its route, according to aviation safety experts.

“It would suggest either intentionally not complying with the FAA rules regarding visual flight or inadvertent entry into these hazardous conditions,” said Jeffrey Guzzetti, former chief of accident investigations at the FAA.

The pilot, identified as Ara Zobayan, had been flying under what are known as “special” visual rules, which allow for flying in deteriorating weather but that still required him to stay clear of clouds and low visibility. If pilots flying under visual rules choose to fly into clouds, FAA rules require that they radio a controller for permission.

The helicopter’s sharp turn and sudden descent in the final seconds are consistent with other crashes in which pilots became disoriented in clouds, Guzzetti said. The NTSB, where Guzzetti also worked, has investigated numerous cases in which helicopters crashed after entering fog or dense clouds.

--With assistance from Christopher Palmeri.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Levin in Washington at alevin24@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jon Morgan at jmorgan97@bloomberg.net, John Harney, Chelsea Mes

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