KTUU-TV: Questions Raised About Cessna 208 De-Icing System

In this KTUU-TV (Anchorage) report, Slack Davis Sanger aviation attorney Ladd Sanger comments about the November 29th crash near St. Mary’s, Alaska, and the Cessna 208 Caravan’s ice-protection system.

KTUU-TV: Questions Raised About Cessna 208 De-Icing System
by Corey Allen-Young, KTUU-TV (Anchorage, Alaska)
December 4, 2013

The National Transportation Safety Board is still in the early phases of its investigation into the November 29 crash of a Cessna 208 Caravan that killed four people.

But a Lower 48 law firm said the plane should not have been in the air the day it went down because it did not have an adequate de-icing system.

Ladd Sanger, an aviation lawyer who works for Texas-based Slack Davis Sanger, has been part of litigation cases involving Cessna 208 icing problems in the past.

He said based on preliminary information, Friday’s crash near St. Mary’s suggests the same problem occurred in the Western Alaska crash.

Sanger said Cessna changed the design of the Caravan’s ice-protection system, but there are at least 5,000 planes across the country that have not been retrofitted with the safety upgrades.

According to a 2011 NTSB report, there have been 47 fatalities involving Cessna 208 Caravans that were covered in ice, including 10 from a 2001 Pen Air crash in Dillingham.

Sanger said he wonders why Cessna and Hageland Aviation services allowed that plane to fly.

“It’s one thing to have an airplane down in the Caribbean, you don’t even need an deicing system at all,” he said. “But when operating that plane like Hageland is in Alaska, where you’re certain to have low visibility and icy conditions on a regular basis, you really need to have the most sophisticated up-to-date and reliable de-icing system.”

Era Aviation owns Hageland and issued a statement today: “We look forward to providing pertinent information to the NTSB and all local, state and federal agencies.

“We will not engage in speculation until the investigation is complete, as it may impact the inquiry into the accident.”

Fifteen air carriers in Alaska that fly Cessna aircraft declined to comment on their own safety modifications.

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