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Air France Concorde flight 4590 takes off with fire trailing from its engine on the left wing from Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris AP Photo/Toshihiko Sato, File
Concorde

French court overturns Concorde crash convictions

Manslaughter convictions against Continental Airlines and a mechanic for the 2000 crash that killed 113 people were overturned.

IN A SURPRISE  ruling in one of the most high-profile disasters in aviation history, a French appeals court today overturned manslaughter convictions against Continental Airlines and a mechanic for the 2000 crash of an Air France Concorde that killed 113 people.

The crash hastened the end for the already-faltering supersonic Concorde, synonymous with high-tech luxury but a commercial failure. The program, jointly operated by Air France and British Airways, was taken out of service in 2003.

Paris

In the accident, which occurred on July 25, 2000, the jet crashed into a hotel near Paris’ Charles de Gaulle airport soon after taking off, killing all 109 people aboard and four on the ground. Most of the victims were Germans heading to a cruise in the Caribbean.

A mistake made weeks earlier and thousands of miles away by a Continental mechanic in Houston played a crucial role in the crash, the court found.

According to the original ruling, mechanic John Taylor fitted the wrong metal strip on a Continental DC-10. The piece ultimately fell off on the runway in Paris, puncturing the Concorde’s tire. The burst tire sent bits of rubber flying, puncturing the fuel tanks, which started the fire that brought down the plane.

On Thursday, Judge Michele Luga overturned the 2010 manslaughter conviction of Continental and the mechanic, saying their mistakes didn’t make them criminally responsible for the deaths.

Even if Taylor knew that the metal strip could become detached, “he could never have imagined a scenario where this simple titanium blade could cause such a disaster,” Luga said in court.

A firefighter sprays water on the debris of an Air France Concorde plane after it crashed into a hotel shortly after takeoff in Gonesse, France. (AP Photo/Ministry of Interior/Civil Security, Joachim Bertrand, Pool, File)

Part of the problem was that the Concorde’s design left it vulnerable to shock, according to judicial investigators who said officials had known about the problem for more than 20 years. The lower court ruled that though French officials had missed opportunities to improve the Concorde over the years, they could “be accused of no serious misconduct.”

Outside the courtroom, Continental Airlines lawyer Olivier Metzner called the decision “historic” and finally put an end “to 12 years of wrongful accusations” against Continental.

“What caused the crash was a plane that shouldn’t have been flying,” Metzner said of the Concorde, which he claimed was only being kept in service for “economic and symbolic reasons.”

Crash victims’ families, however, expressed disappointment with the ruling. Stephane Gicquel, head of a group of victims’ families, said Thursday’s ruling left them with “a sense of powerlessness.”

“The court says the plane shouldn’t have flown. It did fly, but no conclusion is drawn,” he said.

The French court that convicted Continental and the mechanic in 2010 for the crash imposed about €2 million in damages and fines on the carrier. The appeals court upheld Continental’s civil responsibility and ordered it to pay Air France €1 million in damages and interests.

Parties including Air France and Continental compensated the families of most victims years ago, so financial claims were not the trial’s focus — the main goal was to assign responsibility. In France, unlike in many other countries, plane crashes routinely lead to trials to assign criminal responsibility — cases that often drag on for years.

Tragic accident

Rescue workers stand on the crash site of an Air France Concorde plane that crashed in Gonesse, outside Paris, shortly after take off. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

“This was a tragic accident and we support the court’s decision that Continental did not bear fault,” Megan McCarthy, a spokeswoman for Chicago-based United Continental Holdings Inc., said in a written statement. Continental merged with United in 2010.

At the time it was launched, the Concorde supersonic jet was the height of luxury, flying between New York and the European capitals of London and Paris in less than four hours, instead of a standard flight of over seven hours. Flying west, British Airways boasted, the flight’s well-heeled travellers could effectively arrive at their destinations before they left.

In the years it took French judicial investigators to work their way to trial, amassing 80,000 pages of court documents, the Concordes were revamped, retired and finally sent to museums.

The Concorde wasn’t the first supersonic jet to crash in Paris. The Soviet Union’s equivalent, the Tupolev 144, made its debut in December 1968, just days before the first flight of the Concorde. They were mothballed after one crashed at the 1973 Paris Air Show.

Read: Continental Airlines found guilty in Concorde crash>

Author
Associated Foreign Press
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