- Dominicana DC-9 air disaster
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Dominicana de Aviación DC-9 Accident summary Date February 15, 1970 Type Mechanical failure Site Punta Caucedo near Santo Domingo Crew 5 Injuries 0 Fatalities 102 (all) Survivors 0 Aircraft type DC-9 Operator Dominicana de Aviación Tail number HI-177 Flight origin Las Américas International Airport Destination Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport The Dominicana de Aviación Santo Domingo DC-9 air disaster occurred on February 15, 1970 when a Dominicana de Aviación (Dominican Airlines) McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 twin-engine jet airliner crashed on takeoff from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic en route to San Juan, Puerto Rico.
The aircraft used for the Dominicana flight to San Juan was almost brand new, having been delivered to the airline from the McDonnell Douglas factory in 1969. The plane's registration was HI-177, but there are no data concerning the flight's number.
The jetliner was on what would have been a brief international flight lasting 45 minutes from Las Américas International Airport in Punta Caucedo, near Santo Domingo, to San Juan, Puerto Rico's Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport.
The flight took off at about 6:30 p.m. Two minutes after departure, over water, it lost power on the number 2 (right) engine. The pilots tried to turn around, asking the Las Americas Airport control tower for clearance for an emergency landing, but, during the turn, the number 1 (left) engine also lost power, and, because the aircraft was in a turning motion when the left engine failed, the jet plunged into the sea, in what has been the only jet airliner tragedy to date for either Las Americas or Luis Muñoz Marín International Airports.
All 97 passengers and five crew members died in the crash, for a total of 102 deaths.[1]
Contents
Investigation
The investigation showed that the airliner had been the victim of fuel contamination, causing both engines to fail. The jet fuel used to fill the airliner's tanks had been contaminated, leading to the engine stoppage.
Notable victims
Several famous passengers were among the dead, including former world boxing champion Carlos Cruz, his wife and nineteen-month-old son, who were flying to San Juan for a rematch against Carlos Ortiz; the wife, daughter and sister of Imbert Barreras, a Dominican Army Brigade General who participated in the plot to kill the dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina in Santo Domingo, on May 30 of 1961; Juan Ramón Loubriel, who had participated in three professional sports leagues in Puerto Rico (basketball, volleyball and association football); the then-girlfriend of astrologer Walter Mercado, and most of the members of Puerto Rico's women's national volleyball team, who were returning home after a friendly game against the Dominican Republic's women's national team. The few Puerto Rican volleyball players who could not be accommodated in this flight remember how they heard news about the crash on television and received the news with tears.
Puerto Rican Salsa orchestra El Gran Combo was set to board this flight but didn't when one of their members had a bad feeling about the flight and convinced the others not to take it.
See also
- List of accidents and incidents on commercial airliners
- Air safety
- Fuel starvation
References
- ^ D. Gero (2005-05-21). "ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 HI-177 Santo Domingo". Aviation Safety Network. Flight Safety Foundation. http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19700215-0. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
External links
← 1969 · Aviation accidents and incidents in 1970 · 1971 → Feb 04 Aerolineas Argentinas Flight 707
Feb 15 Dominicana DC-9 disaster
Feb 21 Swissair Flight 330
Mar 17 Eastern Airlines Flight 1320
Mar 31 Japan Airlines Flight 351
Apr 21 Philippine Airlines Flight 215May 02 ALM Flight 980
May 15 Dymshits–Kuznetsov hijacking affair
Jul 05 Air Canada Flight 621
Aug 09 LANSA Flight 502
Aug 12 China Airlines Flight 206Sep 06 Dawson's Field hijackings
Oct 02 Wichita State Univ football team
Oct 15 Aeroflot Flight 244
Nov 14 Southern Airways Flight 932Incidents resulting in at least 50 deaths shown in italics. Deadliest incident shown in bold smallcaps. Categories:- Aviation accidents and incidents in 1970
- Airliner accidents and incidents caused by mechanical failure
- Aviation accidents and incidents in the Dominican Republic
- 1970 in the Dominican Republic
- Accidents and incidents involving the McDonnell Douglas DC-9
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