DCA07MA003
On October 11, 2006, about 1442 eastern daylight time, a Cirrus Design SR20, N929CD, operated as a personal flight, crashed
into an apartment building in Manhattan, New York City, while attempting to maneuver above the East River. The two pilots
on board the airplane, a certificated private pilot who was the owner of the airplane and a passenger who was a certificated
commercial pilot with a flight instructor certificate, were killed. One person on the ground sustained serious injuries, two
people on the ground sustained minor injuries, and the airplane was destroyed by impact forces and postcrash fire. The flight
was operating under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 91, and no flight plan was filed. Marginal
visual flight rules (MVFR) conditions prevailed at the time of the accident.
The accident airplane departed Teterboro Airport (TEB), Teterboro, New Jersey, about 1429 and was cleared for a visual
flight rules (VFR) departure. According to air traffic control (ATC) transcripts, the pilots acknowledged that they were to
stay out of the New York class B airspace. After takeoff, the accident airplane turned southeast and climbed to an altitude
of about 600 to 800 feet. When the flight reached the western shore of the Hudson River, it turned to the south, remaining
over the river, then descended to 500 feet. The flight continued southbound over the Hudson River until abeam of the southern
tip of Manhattan, at which point, the flight turned southwest bound. Radar data from John F. Kennedy International Airport
(JFK), Jamaica, New York; Newark International Airport (EWR), Newark, New Jersey; and Westchester County Airport (HPN), White
Plains, New York, indicated that the accident airplane's altitude varied from 500 to 700 feet for the remainder of the flight.
About 1436, the airplane flew around the Statue of Liberty then headed to the northeast, at which point, it proceeded
to fly over the East River. About 1 mile north of the Queensboro Bridge, the airplane made a left turn to reverse its course.
Radar contact was lost about 1442. The airplane impacted a 520-foot tall apartment building at 524 East 72nd Street, 333 feet
above street level.
[The Safety Board's full brief is available at http://ntsb.gov/Publictn/pubictn.htm. The Aviation Accident Brief number
is NTSB/AAB-07/02]
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