June 1, 2010 3:01 PM
- Text
Pilot's Warning Heard In Deadly Crash
(AP)
The pilot of a private jet warned air traffic controllers that his plane was "going off the end" of a runway before it crashed, killing him and three others and injuring celebrity DJ AM and former Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker.
His words are the last captured on newly released cockpit recordings from the Sept. 19 crash, which severely burned Barker and DJ AM, a celebrity disc jockey whose real name is Adam Goldstein. Both are expected to recover.
Controllers at the Columbia, S.C., airport can also be heard on the eerie recordings scrambling to divert other planes and summon emergency personnel after the jet shot off the runway, ripped through a fence and came to rest in flames.
Those killed included the two pilots and two of the musicians' close friends.
"Roll the equipment, we're going off the end," co-pilot James Bland says on the recordings, released Tuesday.
"We've had an emergency, just fly straight ahead," a controller tells another pilot, who changed course to land at another local airport. Flying over the blaze, the pilot reported back to the tower: "We see it down there. It doesn't look good."
Barker and Goldstein had performed together under the name TRVSDJ-AM at a free concert in Columbia the night of the crash. The jet, which was headed for Van Nuys, California, is owned by Global Exec Aviation, a California-based charter company, and was certified to operate last year.
Company officials have said they are cooperating with the investigation into the crash.
By Meg Kinnard
His words are the last captured on newly released cockpit recordings from the Sept. 19 crash, which severely burned Barker and DJ AM, a celebrity disc jockey whose real name is Adam Goldstein. Both are expected to recover.
Controllers at the Columbia, S.C., airport can also be heard on the eerie recordings scrambling to divert other planes and summon emergency personnel after the jet shot off the runway, ripped through a fence and came to rest in flames.
Those killed included the two pilots and two of the musicians' close friends.
"Roll the equipment, we're going off the end," co-pilot James Bland says on the recordings, released Tuesday.
"We've had an emergency, just fly straight ahead," a controller tells another pilot, who changed course to land at another local airport. Flying over the blaze, the pilot reported back to the tower: "We see it down there. It doesn't look good."
Barker and Goldstein had performed together under the name TRVSDJ-AM at a free concert in Columbia the night of the crash. The jet, which was headed for Van Nuys, California, is owned by Global Exec Aviation, a California-based charter company, and was certified to operate last year.
Company officials have said they are cooperating with the investigation into the crash.
By Meg Kinnard
Popular Now in Entertainment
- Adele in Whitney's shadow as Grammys start
- Leslie Carter dead at 25
- Adele wins 6 Grammys, including Album of the Year
- Zsa Zsa at 95: Husband releases birthday photos
- Watch: Whitney's final performance
- Beyonce, Jay-Z post photos of Blue Ivy Carter
- "Idol": Carrey's daughter out, and then disaster
- Bobbi Kristina on alleged coke snorting photos
- Whitney Houston's final performance
- Whitney's mother: "We are devastated"
- Beyonce shows off her post-baby body
- Mariah Carey on Twitter: "Heartbroken"; Others react
- Schwarzenegger, Stallone have hospital run-in
- Remembering Whitney Houston 1963-2012
- Whitney Houston's body moved from hotel
- Bobby Brown joins daughter in Los Angeles
- Grammys 2012: Fashion statements for good and bad
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Summary Box: Cyprus opens oil, gas drilling area
- Fitch cuts ratings on 4 Spanish banks
- Summary Box: IMF says more Israelis must work
- Final round at Pebble highest rated in 15 years
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






