A view of 787 7th Avenue in midtown Manhattan where a helicopter was reported to have crashed in New York, June 10, 2019. "Should the helicopter have been flying [in that weather]? I don't know yet," Doug Brazy, an NTSB air safety investigator, told reporters on Tuesday.
McCormack first took off on Monday from Westchester County, New York, with one passenger on board, Brazy said. McCormack flew to Manhattan where the passenger got off the chopper, he said. That passenger has been interviewed and said there was nothing out of the ordinary during the flight, Brazy said.
The pilot then waited and reviewed the weather, Brazy said, before he left from the 34th Street heliport on the east side of Manhattan to head to Linden, New Jersey.
Soon after he took off, he radioed back to the heliport to say he was in trouble because of the weather and lack of visibility, according to law enforcement officials briefed on the probe.
McCormack was flying at a very low speed, trying to maneuver his way to fly safely; at one point, he ascended higher than helicopters typically fly to try to get above the clouds, but he was unsuccessful, the officials said.
Soon, he was traveling west into the no-fly zone, instead of south as he had planned, because he had become disoriented, the officials said.
Then the helicopter crash landed, the officials said.
The pilot was not certified to fly in poor weather where he could not visually navigate, according to FAA records. He was only certified to fly in conditions where he could visually navigate and not rely on the aircraft’s instruments.
Investigators will decide if any regulations were broken, an FAA official told ABC News on Tuesday.
ABC News' Aaron Katersky, Jenn Leong, and Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.
Kaynak:Abcnews