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American Airlines Flight 965

American Airlines Flight 965 was a regularly scheduled flight from Miami International Airport in Miami, Florida, to Alfonso Bonilla Aragón International Airport in Cali, Colombia. On December 20, 1995, the Boeing 757-200 flying this route (registration N651AA[1]) crashed into a mountain in Buga, Colombia, around 9:40 pm killing 151 of the 155 passengers and all eight crew members.[2][3]

American Airlines Flight 965
Wreckage of N651AA at the crash site
Accident
DateDecember 20, 1995
SummaryControlled flight into terrain caused by navigational error and pilot error
Sitenear Buga, Valle del Cauca, Colombia
3°50′45.2″N 76°06′17.1″W / 3.845889°N 76.104750°W / 3.845889; -76.104750Coordinates: 3°50′45.2″N 76°06′17.1″W / 3.845889°N 76.104750°W / 3.845889; -76.104750
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 757–223
OperatorAmerican Airlines
IATA flight No.AA965
ICAO flight No.AAL965
Call signAMERICAN 965
RegistrationN651AA
Flight originMiami International Airport, Miami, Florida, United States
DestinationAlfonso Bonilla Aragón Int'l Airport, Cali, Colombia
Occupants163
Passengers155
Crew8
Fatalities159 (initially 158)
Injuries4
Survivors4 passengers (initially 5) and a dog

The crash was the first U.S.-owned 757 accident and is currently the deadliest aviation accident to occur in Colombia.[4][5] It was also the deadliest accident involving a Boeing 757 at that time,[6] but was surpassed by Birgenair Flight 301 which crashed seven weeks later with 189 fatalities.[7] Flight 965 was the deadliest air disaster involving a U.S. carrier since the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988.[8]

The Colombian Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics investigated the accident and determined it was caused by navigational errors by the flight crew.[9]

Aircraft

 
A Boeing 757 (N650AA), identical to the one involved in the accident

The aircraft was a Boeing 757–223 registered N651AA. Its first flight was on August 12, 1991, and was delivered to American Airlines on August 27, 1991; it was the 390th Boeing 757 built. The aircraft was powered by two Rolls-Royce RB211 engines.[10][11]

Flight history

Departure

At that time, Flight 965 mainly carried people returning to Colombia for the Christmas holiday, vacationers, and businesspeople.[12] A winter storm in the Northeast United States caused the airline to delay the departure of the airliner for 30 minutes to allow for connecting passengers to board the flight, and seasonal congestion caused further delay.[13] Flight 965 took off at 6:35 pm EST (23:35 UTC), nearly two hours late.[9]: 2 [14][15]

The cockpit crew consisted of Captain Nicholas Tafuri (57), and First Officer Donald "Don" Williams (39).[16] Both pilots were considered to be highly skilled airmen. Captain Tafuri had more than 13,000 hours of flying experience (including 2,260 hours on the Boeing 757/767), and First Officer Williams had almost 6,000 hours, with 2,286 of them on the Boeing 757/767.

Captain Tafuri had flown with the U.S. Air Force from 1963 to 1969 and served in the Vietnam War, and joined American Airlines in 1969. First Officer Williams had flown with the U.S. Air Force from 1979 to 1986, and joined American Airlines in 1986.

Going off-course

Cali's air traffic controllers had no functional radar to monitor the 757, as it had been blown up in 1992 by the terror group FARC.[17] Cali's approach uses several radio beacons to guide pilots around the mountains and canyons that surround the city. The airplane's flight management system (FMS) navigation computer already had these beacons programmed in, and should have, in theory, told the pilots exactly where to turn, climb, and descend, all the way from Miami to the terminal in Cali.[15]

Since the wind was calm, Cali's controllers asked the pilots whether they wanted to fly a non-precision straight-in approach to runway 19 rather than coming around for a precision ILS-approach to runway 01. The pilots agreed to the straight-in approach, hoping to make up some time. The pilots then erroneously cleared all the programmed approach waypoints from the flight plan in the aircraft FMS. When the controller asked the pilots to report passing over the Tulua VOR (identified as "ULQ") north of Cali, it was no longer programmed into the FMS flight plan, so they had to find the VOR identifier "ULQ" in their approach chart. In the meantime, they extended the aircraft's speed brakes to slow it down and expedite its descent.[9]

By the time the pilots had selected the Tulua VOR identifier "ULQ" into the FMS flight plan they had already passed over it. The pilots then tried to select the next approach waypoint Rozo in the FMS. However, the Rozo non-directional beacon (NDB) was identified as "R" in their approach chart but not in the FMS. Instead the FMS database used a different naming convention and identified the Rozo NDB as "ROZO". Colombia had also duplicated the identifier "R" for the Romeo NDB near Bogotá 150 nmi (170 mi; 280 km) from Cali, which is not in line with the ICAO standard effective from 1978 to only duplicate identifiers if more than 600 nmi (690 mi; 1,100 km) apart. By selecting "R" from the waypoint list, the captain caused the autopilot to start flying a course to Bogotá, resulting in the airplane turning east in a wide semicircle. The pilots then attempted to correct this by turning back to the south. By the time the error was detected, the aircraft was in a valley running roughly north–south parallel to the one they should have been in. The pilots had put the aircraft on a collision course with a 3,000-meter (9,800 ft) mountain.[18] The air traffic controller, Nelson Rivera Ramírez, believed that some of the requests of the pilots did not make sense, but did not know enough non-aviation English to convey this.[19]

Crash

Twelve seconds before the plane hit the mountain, named El Diluvio (the Deluge),[20] the ground proximity warning system (GPWS) activated, announcing an imminent terrain collision and sounding an alarm. Within a second of this warning, the first officer disengaged the autopilot, and the captain attempted to climb clear of the mountain. Within two seconds of the warning, take-off power was selected, and in the next second, pitch was increased to 20.6° upwards, causing activation of the stick shaker.[21] The stick shaker mechanically vibrates the control yoke (the "stick") to warn the flight crew of an imminent aerodynamic stall.

When take-off power was selected, neither pilot had remembered to disengage the previously deployed speed brakes, which were fully extended and significantly reduced the rate of climb. At 9:41:28 pm EST, the aircraft struck trees at about 2,720 metres (8,920 ft) above mean sea level on the east side of the 2,700-meter-tall (9,000 ft) mountain. The last record on the flight data recorder indicated that the plane was flying at 187 kn (346 km/h; 215 mph) and with a pitch attitude of almost 28°. The crash was 9.7 km (6.0 mi; 5.2 nmi) south of Tulua VOR and 28 km (17 mi; 15 nmi) north of the approach end of runway 19 at Alfonso Bonilla Aragon International Airport.[9] Initially, the aircraft cleared the summit, but struck the trees with the tail and crashed shortly after the summit.

Five passengers, all seated within two rows of each other, survived the initial impact, but one died two days later of his injuries.[22] In addition to the four human survivors,[23] a dog, which had been in a carrier in the cargo hold at the time of the crash, survived the accident.[24]

Crash investigation and final report

The crash was investigated by the Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics (Spanish: Aeronáutica Civil) of the Republic of Colombia,[9] with assistance from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), as well as other parties, including the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, Allied Pilots Association, American Airlines, Boeing Commercial Airplane Group, and Rolls-Royce Engines.

The investigations revealed that neither the Boeing fixed-base simulator nor the flight management system simulator could be backdriven with the data obtained directly from the accident airplane's flight data recorder (FDR). Because the 757 flight simulators could not be backdriven during the tests, whether the airplane would have missed the mountain/tree tops if the speedbrakes had been retracted during the climb attempt could not be determined with precision,[9] but the final report stated that if the flightcrew had retracted the speedbrakes one second after initiating the escape maneuver, the airplane could have been climbing through a position that was 46 m (150 ft) above the initial impact point. Because the airplane would have continued to climb and had the potential to increase its rate of climb, it might well have cleared the trees at the top of the mountain.

The Civil Aeronautics prepared a final report of its investigation in September 1996, which was released through the U.S. NTSB.[25]

In its report, the Civil Aeronautics determined these probable causes of the accident:

  1. The flight crew's failure to adequately plan and execute the approach to runway 19 at SKCL and their inadequate use of automation
  2. Failure of the flight crew to discontinue the approach into Cali, despite numerous cues alerting them of the inadvisability of continuing the approach
  3. The lack of situational awareness of the flight crew regarding vertical navigation, proximity to terrain, and the relative location of critical radio aids
  4. Failure of the flight crew to revert to basic radio navigation at the time when the flight management system-assisted navigation became confusing and demanded an excessive workload in a critical phase of the flight

In addition, the Civil Aeronautics determined that these factors contributed to the accident:

  1. The flight crew's ongoing efforts to expedite their approach and landing to avoid potential delays
  2. The flight crew's execution of the ground proximity warning system escape maneuver while the speedbrakes remained deployed
  3. FMS logic that dropped all intermediate fixes from the display(s) in the event of execution of a direct routing
  4. FMS-generated navigational information that used a different naming convention from that published in navigational charts

The Civil Aeronautics's report also included a variety of safety-related recommendations to the involved parties (number of individual recommendations in parentheses):[9]

Investigators later labeled the accident a nonsurvivable event, citing the impact forces and subsequent destruction of the aircraft.[9]: 15, 55 [15]

Aftermath

Scavengers took engine thrust reversers, cockpit avionics, and other components from the crashed 757, using Colombian military and private helicopters to go to and from the crash site. Many of the stolen components reappeared as unapproved aircraft parts on the black market in Greater Miami parts brokers.[26] In response, the airline published a 14-page list stating all of the parts missing from the crashed aircraft. The list included the serial numbers of all of the parts.[26]

In 1997, U.S. District Judge Stanley Marcus ruled that the pilots had committed "willful misconduct"; the ruling applied to American Airlines, which represented the dead pilots.[27] The judge's ruling was subsequently reversed in June 1999 by the U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta, which also overturned the jury verdict and declared that the judge in the case was wrong in issuing a finding of fault with the pilots, a role which should have been reserved for the jury only.[28]

American Airlines settled numerous lawsuits brought against it by the families of the victims of the accident. American Airlines filed a "third-party complaint" lawsuit for contribution against Jeppesen and Honeywell, which made the navigation computer database and failed to include the coordinates of Rozo under the identifier "R"; the case went to trial in United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami. At the trial, American Airlines admitted that it bore some legal responsibility for the accident. Honeywell and Jeppesen each contended that they had no legal responsibility for the accident. In June 2000, the jury found that Jeppesen was 30% at fault for the crash, Honeywell was 10% at fault, and American Airlines was 60% at fault.[29]

An enhanced ground proximity warning system (EGPWS) that could have prevented the accident was introduced in 1996.[30][31][32]

Since 2002, aircraft capable of carrying more than six passengers are required to have an advanced terrain awareness warning system.[33][34]

As of August 2021, American Airlines continued to operate the Miami-Cali route, as American Airlines Flight 921, operated by Boeing 737-800 aircraft.[35]

Notable passengers

The U.S. government encountered difficulty while trying to distinguish Americans from non-Americans, as many passengers held dual citizenships.[36]

In popular culture

  • The events of Flight 965 were featured in "Lost", a season-two (2005) episode of the Canadian TV series Mayday[15] (called Air Emergency and Air Disasters in the U.S. and Air Crash Investigation in the UK and elsewhere around the world). The episode was broadcast with the title "Crash on the Mountain" in the United Kingdom, Australia, and Asia.[citation needed]
  • The accident was also featured on Why Planes Crash on MSNBC, in a 2015 episode titled "Sudden Impact".[citation needed]
  • The 2018 episode "Disastrous Descents" of the TV series Aircrash Confidential, produced by WMR Productions and IMG Entertainment, featured the accident.[citation needed]
  • A documentary film released in 2021, American 965,[37] directed and produced by a former British Airways captain with Fact Not Fiction Films, suggests a different possible cause for the accident.[38][39]
  • Outlook, a BBC World Service radio program, had an episode titled "The Father and Daughter Finding Closure After a Plane Crash", which consisted of interviews with two of the survivors of the crash.[40]
  • The accident is featured prominently in the 2011 novel The Sound of Things Falling by Colombian author Juan Gabriel Vasquez.

See also

Similar accidents

References

  1. ^ "FAA Registry (N651AA)". Federal Aviation Administration.
  2. ^ "ASN Accident Description (American Airlines-965)". Aviation Safety Network. December 20, 1995. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  3. ^ AA965 Cali Accident Report Aeronautica Civil
  4. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 757–223 N651AA Buga". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  5. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Colombia air safety profile". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  6. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Boeing 757". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  7. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 757–225 TC-GEN Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic". aviation-safety.net. Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  8. ^ Acohido, Byron (January 18, 1997). "American Airlines jet crashes in the Andes". The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 6, 2009.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h "Controlled Flight Into Terrain, American Airlines Flight 965, Boeing 757–223, N651AA, Near Cali, Colombia, December 20, 1995" (PDF). Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics. September 6, 1996. (PDF) from the original on January 24, 2021. Retrieved January 4, 2020 – via Aviation Safety Network.
  10. ^ "American Airlines N651AA (Boeing 757 – MSN 24609)". www.airfleets.net. Airfleets aviation. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  11. ^ "N651AA American Airlines Boeing 757–200". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  12. ^ "Family members await crash news". CNN. Retrieved March 29, 2008.
  13. ^ "American Airlines jet crashes in the Andes". CNN. December 21, 1995. Retrieved May 6, 2009.
  14. ^ "Cali Accident Report". sunnyday.mit.edu. Retrieved May 30, 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d "Lost". Mayday. Season 2. Episode 5. 2004. Discovery Channel Canada / National Geographic Channel.
  16. ^ a b "The List of the 164 People on Flight 965." Associated Press at The New York Times. Saturday December 23, 1995. Retrieved on May 6, 2009.
  17. ^ Mickolus, Edward F.; Simmons, Susan L. (1997). Terrorism, 1992–1995: A Chronology of Events and a Selectively Annotated Bibliography. ABC-CLIO. p. 904. ISBN 978-0-313-30468-2.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on February 14, 2006. Retrieved February 14, 2006.
  19. ^ "The AA965 Cali accident". Georgia Institute of Technology. Archived from the original on June 16, 2007. Retrieved March 29, 2008.
  20. ^ Escobar, Jaime; Restrepo, Andrés. "16o ANIVERSARIO DEL ACCIDENTE DEL VUELO 965 DE AMERICAN AIRLINES. CERRO EL DILUVIO, BUGA VALLE. Parte 1" [16th ANNIVERSARY OF THE AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 965 ACCIDENT. CERRO EL DILUVIO, BUGA VALLE. Part 1]. Spotting in SKCL/CLO (in Spanish). Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  21. ^ "B752, vicinity Cali Colombia, 1995". www.skybrary.aero. SKYbrary Aviation Safety. April 5, 2021. from the original on February 3, 2016. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  22. ^ Sider, Don (January 8, 1996). "Miracle on the Mountain". People. Retrieved June 22, 2009.
  23. ^ Dussan, Michelle (July 30, 2021). "Experience: I survived a plane crash that killed 151 people". The Guardian. Retrieved July 30, 2021.
  24. ^ "Four Survive American Airlines Crash in Colombia". AP NEWS. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  25. ^ . National Transportation Safety Board. Archived from the original on February 13, 2009. Retrieved March 29, 2008. Note: passenger number on NTSB summary is 156, vs. 155 on final report
  26. ^ a b Bajak, Frank (December 8, 1996). "Bogus parts plague airline industry". Sunday News. pp. A9. Retrieved December 8, 2021 – via Associated Press.
  27. ^ Wald, Matthew L. "American Airlines Ruled Guilty Of Misconduct in '95 Cali Crash." The New York Times. Friday September 12, 1997. Retrieved on August 24, 2009.
  28. ^ "Cali Crash Case Overturned". CBS News. CBS. Associated Press. June 16, 1999. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  29. ^ "Crash of American Airlines Boeing in Failure Knowledge Database". Hatamura Institute for the Advancement of Technology. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  30. ^ Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System (EGPWS) – Honeywell Aerospace Engineering October 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ "Accident Overview". lessonslearned.faa.gov. Federal Aviation Administration. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  32. ^ Phillips, Don (May 5, 1996). "Cali Crash Questions Safety of Automated Flight". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  33. ^ "Installation of Terrain Awareness and Warning System (TAWS) Approved for Part 23 Airplanes, Advisory Circular 23-18" (PDF). Federal Aviation Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation. June 14, 2000. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
    Note: Original text copied from U.S. FAA Circular AC23-18 [1]
  34. ^ "Sec. 121.354 – Terrain awareness and warning system". Federal Aviation Administration. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  35. ^ "Flight history for American Airlines flight AA921". Flightradar24. Flightradar24. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  36. ^ "Number of survivors reported drops to 4 Finding how many Americans on board difficult, official says." Associated Press. December 23, 1995.
  37. ^ "American 965 (2021)", IMDb, retrieved December 28, 2021
  38. ^ "American 965 Documentary Film". american965.com. Retrieved December 28, 2021.
  39. ^ "Investigative documentary 'American 965' opens in Los Angeles this week exposing shocking new evidence". Los Angeles Issue. July 9, 2021.
  40. ^ "Outlook – The father and daughter finding closure after a plane crash", BBC Sounds, December 16, 2021, retrieved December 28, 2021

External links

External image
  Pre-crash photo taken from Airliners.net
  • Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics
    • Final Accident Report – AA965
    • (in Spanish) Final Accident Report – AA965 (, ) – Translation by Captain José Bestene Mattar and Maria Isabel Bobrez Orozco
  • "At least four of 164 passengers survive U.S. jet crash in Colombia," CNN
  • Zarrella, John. "Tearful relatives head to Colombia," CNN. December 22, 1995.
  • "More survivors pulled from wreckage of U.S. jet," CNN. December 21, 1995.
  • Dewar, Steuart. "Brown professor, wife, 2 children killed in crash" (). The Associated Press, posted at Brown University.
  • BBC Horizon Program interviewing Mercedes Ramirez Johnson, a survivor of AA flight 965
  • CNN Evening News for Friday, 22 December 1995 Headline: Colombia / American Airlines Plane Crash Vanderbilt University Television Archive
  • Mercedes Ramirez Johnson website
  • Mercer, Pamela. "Pair Who Survived a Crash Relieved to Be on Home Soil." The New York Times. May 19, 1996.
  • Piamba Cortes v. American Airlines Inc. ()
  • B757 Cali Accident in the Compendium of Computer-Related Incidents with Commercial Aircraft including a copy of the Colombian accident report.
  • Cockpit voice recording transcript

american, airlines, flight, regularly, scheduled, flight, from, miami, international, airport, miami, florida, alfonso, bonilla, aragón, international, airport, cali, colombia, december, 1995, boeing, flying, this, route, registration, n651aa, crashed, into, m. American Airlines Flight 965 was a regularly scheduled flight from Miami International Airport in Miami Florida to Alfonso Bonilla Aragon International Airport in Cali Colombia On December 20 1995 the Boeing 757 200 flying this route registration N651AA 1 crashed into a mountain in Buga Colombia around 9 40 pm killing 151 of the 155 passengers and all eight crew members 2 3 American Airlines Flight 965Wreckage of N651AA at the crash siteAccidentDateDecember 20 1995SummaryControlled flight into terrain caused by navigational error and pilot errorSitenear Buga Valle del Cauca Colombia 3 50 45 2 N 76 06 17 1 W 3 845889 N 76 104750 W 3 845889 76 104750 Coordinates 3 50 45 2 N 76 06 17 1 W 3 845889 N 76 104750 W 3 845889 76 104750AircraftAircraft typeBoeing 757 223OperatorAmerican AirlinesIATA flight No AA965ICAO flight No AAL965Call signAMERICAN 965RegistrationN651AAFlight originMiami International Airport Miami Florida United StatesDestinationAlfonso Bonilla Aragon Int l Airport Cali ColombiaOccupants163Passengers155Crew8Fatalities159 initially 158 Injuries4Survivors4 passengers initially 5 and a dogThe crash was the first U S owned 757 accident and is currently the deadliest aviation accident to occur in Colombia 4 5 It was also the deadliest accident involving a Boeing 757 at that time 6 but was surpassed by Birgenair Flight 301 which crashed seven weeks later with 189 fatalities 7 Flight 965 was the deadliest air disaster involving a U S carrier since the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988 8 The Colombian Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics investigated the accident and determined it was caused by navigational errors by the flight crew 9 Contents 1 Aircraft 2 Flight history 2 1 Departure 2 2 Going off course 3 Crash 4 Crash investigation and final report 5 Aftermath 6 Notable passengers 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 Similar accidents 10 References 11 External linksAircraft Edit A Boeing 757 N650AA identical to the one involved in the accident The aircraft was a Boeing 757 223 registered N651AA Its first flight was on August 12 1991 and was delivered to American Airlines on August 27 1991 it was the 390th Boeing 757 built The aircraft was powered by two Rolls Royce RB211 engines 10 11 Flight history EditDeparture Edit At that time Flight 965 mainly carried people returning to Colombia for the Christmas holiday vacationers and businesspeople 12 A winter storm in the Northeast United States caused the airline to delay the departure of the airliner for 30 minutes to allow for connecting passengers to board the flight and seasonal congestion caused further delay 13 Flight 965 took off at 6 35 pm EST 23 35 UTC nearly two hours late 9 2 14 15 The cockpit crew consisted of Captain Nicholas Tafuri 57 and First Officer Donald Don Williams 39 16 Both pilots were considered to be highly skilled airmen Captain Tafuri had more than 13 000 hours of flying experience including 2 260 hours on the Boeing 757 767 and First Officer Williams had almost 6 000 hours with 2 286 of them on the Boeing 757 767 Captain Tafuri had flown with the U S Air Force from 1963 to 1969 and served in the Vietnam War and joined American Airlines in 1969 First Officer Williams had flown with the U S Air Force from 1979 to 1986 and joined American Airlines in 1986 Going off course Edit Cali s air traffic controllers had no functional radar to monitor the 757 as it had been blown up in 1992 by the terror group FARC 17 Cali s approach uses several radio beacons to guide pilots around the mountains and canyons that surround the city The airplane s flight management system FMS navigation computer already had these beacons programmed in and should have in theory told the pilots exactly where to turn climb and descend all the way from Miami to the terminal in Cali 15 Since the wind was calm Cali s controllers asked the pilots whether they wanted to fly a non precision straight in approach to runway 19 rather than coming around for a precision ILS approach to runway 01 The pilots agreed to the straight in approach hoping to make up some time The pilots then erroneously cleared all the programmed approach waypoints from the flight plan in the aircraft FMS When the controller asked the pilots to report passing over the Tulua VOR identified as ULQ north of Cali it was no longer programmed into the FMS flight plan so they had to find the VOR identifier ULQ in their approach chart In the meantime they extended the aircraft s speed brakes to slow it down and expedite its descent 9 By the time the pilots had selected the Tulua VOR identifier ULQ into the FMS flight plan they had already passed over it The pilots then tried to select the next approach waypoint Rozo in the FMS However the Rozo non directional beacon NDB was identified as R in their approach chart but not in the FMS Instead the FMS database used a different naming convention and identified the Rozo NDB as ROZO Colombia had also duplicated the identifier R for the Romeo NDB near Bogota 150 nmi 170 mi 280 km from Cali which is not in line with the ICAO standard effective from 1978 to only duplicate identifiers if more than 600 nmi 690 mi 1 100 km apart By selecting R from the waypoint list the captain caused the autopilot to start flying a course to Bogota resulting in the airplane turning east in a wide semicircle The pilots then attempted to correct this by turning back to the south By the time the error was detected the aircraft was in a valley running roughly north south parallel to the one they should have been in The pilots had put the aircraft on a collision course with a 3 000 meter 9 800 ft mountain 18 The air traffic controller Nelson Rivera Ramirez believed that some of the requests of the pilots did not make sense but did not know enough non aviation English to convey this 19 Crash EditTwelve seconds before the plane hit the mountain named El Diluvio the Deluge 20 the ground proximity warning system GPWS activated announcing an imminent terrain collision and sounding an alarm Within a second of this warning the first officer disengaged the autopilot and the captain attempted to climb clear of the mountain Within two seconds of the warning take off power was selected and in the next second pitch was increased to 20 6 upwards causing activation of the stick shaker 21 The stick shaker mechanically vibrates the control yoke the stick to warn the flight crew of an imminent aerodynamic stall When take off power was selected neither pilot had remembered to disengage the previously deployed speed brakes which were fully extended and significantly reduced the rate of climb At 9 41 28 pm EST the aircraft struck trees at about 2 720 metres 8 920 ft above mean sea level on the east side of the 2 700 meter tall 9 000 ft mountain The last record on the flight data recorder indicated that the plane was flying at 187 kn 346 km h 215 mph and with a pitch attitude of almost 28 The crash was 9 7 km 6 0 mi 5 2 nmi south of Tulua VOR and 28 km 17 mi 15 nmi north of the approach end of runway 19 at Alfonso Bonilla Aragon International Airport 9 Initially the aircraft cleared the summit but struck the trees with the tail and crashed shortly after the summit Five passengers all seated within two rows of each other survived the initial impact but one died two days later of his injuries 22 In addition to the four human survivors 23 a dog which had been in a carrier in the cargo hold at the time of the crash survived the accident 24 Crash investigation and final report EditThe crash was investigated by the Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics Spanish Aeronautica Civil of the Republic of Colombia 9 with assistance from the U S National Transportation Safety Board NTSB as well as other parties including the U S Federal Aviation Administration Allied Pilots Association American Airlines Boeing Commercial Airplane Group and Rolls Royce Engines The investigations revealed that neither the Boeing fixed base simulator nor the flight management system simulator could be backdriven with the data obtained directly from the accident airplane s flight data recorder FDR Because the 757 flight simulators could not be backdriven during the tests whether the airplane would have missed the mountain tree tops if the speedbrakes had been retracted during the climb attempt could not be determined with precision 9 but the final report stated that if the flightcrew had retracted the speedbrakes one second after initiating the escape maneuver the airplane could have been climbing through a position that was 46 m 150 ft above the initial impact point Because the airplane would have continued to climb and had the potential to increase its rate of climb it might well have cleared the trees at the top of the mountain The Civil Aeronautics prepared a final report of its investigation in September 1996 which was released through the U S NTSB 25 In its report the Civil Aeronautics determined these probable causes of the accident The flight crew s failure to adequately plan and execute the approach to runway 19 at SKCL and their inadequate use of automation Failure of the flight crew to discontinue the approach into Cali despite numerous cues alerting them of the inadvisability of continuing the approach The lack of situational awareness of the flight crew regarding vertical navigation proximity to terrain and the relative location of critical radio aids Failure of the flight crew to revert to basic radio navigation at the time when the flight management system assisted navigation became confusing and demanded an excessive workload in a critical phase of the flight In addition the Civil Aeronautics determined that these factors contributed to the accident The flight crew s ongoing efforts to expedite their approach and landing to avoid potential delays The flight crew s execution of the ground proximity warning system escape maneuver while the speedbrakes remained deployed FMS logic that dropped all intermediate fixes from the display s in the event of execution of a direct routing FMS generated navigational information that used a different naming convention from that published in navigational charts The Civil Aeronautics s report also included a variety of safety related recommendations to the involved parties number of individual recommendations in parentheses 9 U S FAA 17 International Civil Aviation Organization 3 American Airlines 2 Investigators later labeled the accident a nonsurvivable event citing the impact forces and subsequent destruction of the aircraft 9 15 55 15 Aftermath EditScavengers took engine thrust reversers cockpit avionics and other components from the crashed 757 using Colombian military and private helicopters to go to and from the crash site Many of the stolen components reappeared as unapproved aircraft parts on the black market in Greater Miami parts brokers 26 In response the airline published a 14 page list stating all of the parts missing from the crashed aircraft The list included the serial numbers of all of the parts 26 In 1997 U S District Judge Stanley Marcus ruled that the pilots had committed willful misconduct the ruling applied to American Airlines which represented the dead pilots 27 The judge s ruling was subsequently reversed in June 1999 by the U S Court of Appeals in Atlanta which also overturned the jury verdict and declared that the judge in the case was wrong in issuing a finding of fault with the pilots a role which should have been reserved for the jury only 28 American Airlines settled numerous lawsuits brought against it by the families of the victims of the accident American Airlines filed a third party complaint lawsuit for contribution against Jeppesen and Honeywell which made the navigation computer database and failed to include the coordinates of Rozo under the identifier R the case went to trial in United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami At the trial American Airlines admitted that it bore some legal responsibility for the accident Honeywell and Jeppesen each contended that they had no legal responsibility for the accident In June 2000 the jury found that Jeppesen was 30 at fault for the crash Honeywell was 10 at fault and American Airlines was 60 at fault 29 An enhanced ground proximity warning system EGPWS that could have prevented the accident was introduced in 1996 30 31 32 Since 2002 aircraft capable of carrying more than six passengers are required to have an advanced terrain awareness warning system 33 34 As of August 2021 update American Airlines continued to operate the Miami Cali route as American Airlines Flight 921 operated by Boeing 737 800 aircraft 35 Notable passengers EditParis Kanellakis a computer scientist at Brown University died with his wife and two children 16 The U S government encountered difficulty while trying to distinguish Americans from non Americans as many passengers held dual citizenships 36 In popular culture EditThe events of Flight 965 were featured in Lost a season two 2005 episode of the Canadian TV series Mayday 15 called Air Emergency and Air Disasters in the U S and Air Crash Investigation in the UK and elsewhere around the world The episode was broadcast with the title Crash on the Mountain in the United Kingdom Australia and Asia citation needed The accident was also featured on Why Planes Crash on MSNBC in a 2015 episode titled Sudden Impact citation needed The 2018 episode Disastrous Descents of the TV series Aircrash Confidential produced by WMR Productions and IMG Entertainment featured the accident citation needed A documentary film released in 2021 American 965 37 directed and produced by a former British Airways captain with Fact Not Fiction Films suggests a different possible cause for the accident 38 39 Outlook a BBC World Service radio program had an episode titled The Father and Daughter Finding Closure After a Plane Crash which consisted of interviews with two of the survivors of the crash 40 The accident is featured prominently in the 2011 novel The Sound of Things Falling by Colombian author Juan Gabriel Vasquez See also EditList of aircraft accidents and incidents resulting in at least 50 fatalitiesSimilar accidents EditSanta Barbara Airlines Flight 518 Trigana Air Flight 267 Air China Flight 129 Air Inter Flight 148 Thai Airways International Flight 311 Prinair Flight 277References Edit FAA Registry N651AA Federal Aviation Administration ASN Accident Description American Airlines 965 Aviation Safety Network December 20 1995 Retrieved December 20 2022 AA965 Cali Accident Report Aeronautica Civil Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 757 223 N651AA Buga aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Retrieved February 1 2019 Ranter Harro Colombia air safety profile aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Retrieved February 1 2019 Ranter Harro Boeing 757 aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Retrieved February 1 2019 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 757 225 TC GEN Puerto Plata Dominican Republic aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Retrieved February 1 2019 Acohido Byron January 18 1997 American Airlines jet crashes in the Andes The Seattle Times Retrieved May 6 2009 a b c d e f g h Controlled Flight Into Terrain American Airlines Flight 965 Boeing 757 223 N651AA Near Cali Colombia December 20 1995 PDF Special Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics September 6 1996 Archived PDF from the original on January 24 2021 Retrieved January 4 2020 via Aviation Safety Network American Airlines N651AA Boeing 757 MSN 24609 www airfleets net Airfleets aviation Retrieved January 4 2020 N651AA American Airlines Boeing 757 200 www planespotters net Retrieved January 4 2020 Family members await crash news CNN Retrieved March 29 2008 American Airlines jet crashes in the Andes CNN December 21 1995 Retrieved May 6 2009 Cali Accident Report sunnyday mit edu Retrieved May 30 2019 a b c d Lost Mayday Season 2 Episode 5 2004 Discovery Channel Canada National Geographic Channel a b The List of the 164 People on Flight 965 Associated Press at The New York Times Saturday December 23 1995 Retrieved on May 6 2009 Mickolus Edward F Simmons Susan L 1997 Terrorism 1992 1995 A Chronology of Events and a Selectively Annotated Bibliography ABC CLIO p 904 ISBN 978 0 313 30468 2 AOPA Lessons from Cali Article Archived from the original on February 14 2006 Retrieved February 14 2006 The AA965 Cali accident Georgia Institute of Technology Archived from the original on June 16 2007 Retrieved March 29 2008 Escobar Jaime Restrepo Andres 16o ANIVERSARIO DEL ACCIDENTE DEL VUELO 965 DE AMERICAN AIRLINES CERRO EL DILUVIO BUGA VALLE Parte 1 16th ANNIVERSARY OF THE AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 965 ACCIDENT CERRO EL DILUVIO BUGA VALLE Part 1 Spotting in SKCL CLO in Spanish Retrieved October 31 2015 B752 vicinity Cali Colombia 1995 www skybrary aero SKYbrary Aviation Safety April 5 2021 Archived from the original on February 3 2016 Retrieved June 14 2021 Sider Don January 8 1996 Miracle on the Mountain People Retrieved June 22 2009 Dussan Michelle July 30 2021 Experience I survived a plane crash that killed 151 people The Guardian Retrieved July 30 2021 Four Survive American Airlines Crash in Colombia AP NEWS Retrieved December 20 2022 NTSB Report Summary National Transportation Safety Board Archived from the original on February 13 2009 Retrieved March 29 2008 Note passenger number on NTSB summary is 156 vs 155 on final report a b Bajak Frank December 8 1996 Bogus parts plague airline industry Sunday News pp A9 Retrieved December 8 2021 via Associated Press Wald Matthew L American Airlines Ruled Guilty Of Misconduct in 95 Cali Crash The New York Times Friday September 12 1997 Retrieved on August 24 2009 Cali Crash Case Overturned CBS News CBS Associated Press June 16 1999 Retrieved August 30 2009 Crash of American Airlines Boeing in Failure Knowledge Database Hatamura Institute for the Advancement of Technology Retrieved April 15 2011 Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System EGPWS Honeywell Aerospace Engineering Archived October 2 2011 at the Wayback Machine Accident Overview lessonslearned faa gov Federal Aviation Administration Retrieved June 16 2020 Phillips Don May 5 1996 Cali Crash Questions Safety of Automated Flight Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 16 2020 Installation of Terrain Awareness and Warning System TAWS Approved for Part 23 Airplanes Advisory Circular 23 18 PDF Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation June 14 2000 Retrieved May 4 2020 Note Original text copied from U S FAA Circular AC23 18 1 Sec 121 354 Terrain awareness and warning system Federal Aviation Administration Retrieved May 4 2020 Flight history for American Airlines flight AA921 Flightradar24 Flightradar24 Retrieved June 16 2020 Number of survivors reported drops to 4 Finding how many Americans on board difficult official says Associated Press December 23 1995 American 965 2021 IMDb retrieved December 28 2021 American 965 Documentary Film american965 com Retrieved December 28 2021 Investigative documentary American 965 opens in Los Angeles this week exposing shocking new evidence Los Angeles Issue July 9 2021 Outlook The father and daughter finding closure after a plane crash BBC Sounds December 16 2021 retrieved December 28 2021External links EditExternal image Pre crash photo taken from Airliners netSpecial Administrative Unit of Civil Aeronautics Final Accident Report AA965 Text version of final report Prepared for the World Wide Web by Peter Ladkin of Bielefeld University Alt Alt 2 Archive Archive of Alt 2 Alt Archive Appendices The people who prepared them for the World Wide Web used Deskscan II to scan photocopies of them in Spanish Final Accident Report AA965 Archive Alt Archive Translation by Captain Jose Bestene Mattar and Maria Isabel Bobrez Orozco At least four of 164 passengers survive U S jet crash in Colombia CNN Zarrella John Tearful relatives head to Colombia CNN December 22 1995 More survivors pulled from wreckage of U S jet CNN December 21 1995 Dewar Steuart Brown professor wife 2 children killed in crash Archive The Associated Press posted at Brown University BBC Horizon Program interviewing Mercedes Ramirez Johnson a survivor of AA flight 965 CNN Evening News for Friday 22 December 1995 Headline Colombia American Airlines Plane Crash Vanderbilt University Television Archive Mercedes Ramirez Johnson website Mercer Pamela Pair Who Survived a Crash Relieved to Be on Home Soil The New York Times May 19 1996 Piamba Cortes v American Airlines Inc Archive B757 Cali Accident in the Compendium of Computer Related Incidents with Commercial Aircraft including a copy of the Colombian accident report Cockpit voice recording transcript Portals Aviation Colombia United States 1990s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Airlines Flight 965 amp oldid 1129042210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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