The Hawker jet was descending through 13,500 feet, near the end of a 34-minute hop from Dayton, Ohio, to Akron Fulton Airport, when one of the passengers leaned through the cockpit door.
“You guys know where we’re going, right?”
It was a joke, but it wasn’t far off the mark.
The National Transportation Safety Board’s account of the Hawker’s November 2015 crash, which took the lives of the jet’s two pilots and of seven employees of the Florida real estate firm that chartered it, is chilling to read. It is a tale of a first officer — the pilot flying, despite an informal company policy that gave all revenue legs to the captain — who seemingly lacked both knowledge and skill, and a captain who failed to take control of…
