Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
The pilots’ loss of airplane control due to spatial disorientation. Contributing to the accident was both pilots’ lack of experience in operating in actual instrument meteorological conditions.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Current)
Analysis
On August 4, 2023, at 2117 Atlantic standard time, a Cessna 172M, N13384, was presumed destroyed when it was involved in an accident near Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, United States Virgin Islands (USVI). The commercial pilot and the private pilot were not located and were presumed fatally injured. The airplane was operated as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight.
According to an FAA inspector, the purpose of the flight was for the private pilot to accumulate additional hours of flight experience toward an instrument rating.
Review of ADS-B and air traffic control data revealed that the airplane departed Rafael Hernandez Airport (BQN), Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, about 1933. The airplane was en route to Cyril E. King Airport (STT), Charlotte Amalie, USVI, on an instrument flight rules flight plan at 5,000 ft msl. At 2043:25, the flight crew requested the ILS Runway 10 approach at STT, followed by the missed approach procedure, and a return to BQN. The San Juan approach controller issued missed approach instructions to turn right to a 250° heading and climb and maintain 3,000 ft msl. The flight crew acknowledged this with a correct readback and no further transmissions were received from the flight crew.
After the missed approach, at 2109:31, the controller instructed the flight crew to climb and maintain 6,000 ft msl and proceed directly to BQN. At 2114:30, ADS-B track data depicted the airplane deviating from its on-course heading in the climb, turning to the right as it entered an area of isolated, light to heavy precipitation (the airplane had flown through the same area on the inbound flight leg to STT, 13 minutes before, at 2101:19). The airplane turned through 540° and reached 6,450 ft msl before it entered a right-turning spiral descent (see figure). At 2117:25, track data for the airplane ended at 4,700 ft msl. The approach controller attempted to contact the flight crew at 2119:30, and six additional times over the subsequent 5 minutes.
Figure 1 - Overhead view of the final segment of the accident flight track overlaid onto aerial image (note that clouds depicted are not representative of the conditions at the time of the accident). The airplane’s position and altitude are annotated with numbered dots and a corresponding table.
The United States Coast Guard searched about 6,400 square miles by ship and helicopter for a combined total of 45 hours before suspending its search on August 7, 2023. Neither the airplane nor its occupants were recovered.
The pilot held a commercial pilot certificate with ratings for airplane single-engine land, multiengine land, rotorcraft-helicopter, and instrument airplane and helicopter. The pilot’s FAA first-class medical certificate was issued on May 24, 2023, and he declared 327 total hours of flight experience on that date. A review of his pilot logbook revealed an estimated 437 total hours of flight experience, of which 4.9 hours were in actual instrument meteorological conditions. On the copilot’s FAA airman certificate application dated April 19, 2023, he declared 94.5 total hours of flight experience. The copilot’s logbook was not recovered.
According to FAA and maintenance records, the FAA performed a ramp inspection of the airplane on June 15, 2023. On June 29, 2023, at 4,235,6 total aircraft hours, maintenance personnel corrected the discrepancies noted during the ramp inspection and completed an annual inspection of the airplane.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ERA23LA328