Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
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- tolipanebas
- Posts: 2442
- Joined: 12 May 2004, 00:00
Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Plane hasn't even landed in EWR, but the news is already spreading...
http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?secti ... id=6871701
http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?secti ... id=6871701
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
My question may appear silly, but... why didnt' they divert asap ?
Tame birds have only longings. Wild birds fly
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Diversion over the Atlantic ?Coppelia wrote:My question may appear silly, but... why didnt' they divert asap ?
- tolipanebas
- Posts: 2442
- Joined: 12 May 2004, 00:00
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Where too?
The captain may have died deep into the flight, well over the ocean...
Since there is no real urgency any longer (the poor guy sadly passed away), there's no need to go off-route and land asap somewhere in the arctic regions at a small emergency airport; better just continue to the planned destination (and well know home-base) while causing minimal disruption to everybody on the plane.
The captain may have died deep into the flight, well over the ocean...
Since there is no real urgency any longer (the poor guy sadly passed away), there's no need to go off-route and land asap somewhere in the arctic regions at a small emergency airport; better just continue to the planned destination (and well know home-base) while causing minimal disruption to everybody on the plane.
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Ok my excuses, I thought the time of the link was in UTC but guess it is in US/EWR local time.
So, no safety problems for a long haul flight to be carried on with just 2 copilots ?
Sad story for the rest
So, no safety problems for a long haul flight to be carried on with just 2 copilots ?
Sad story for the rest

Tame birds have only longings. Wild birds fly
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Reg was N78004. Two F/Os are now flying the plane into EWR. Landing is scheduled in about five minutes... May he R.I.P. As someone said on the a.net thread: "At least he passed away while doing something he loved to do" (probably).
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Sixty One landed 11:35AM EDT (see: FlightAware)
Last edited by TCAS on 18 Jun 2009, 18:03, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
with all respect for the pilot's family:
now live on CNN TV and Foxnews online:
http://interactive.foxnews.com/livestre ... l?chanId=7
now live on CNN TV and Foxnews online:
http://interactive.foxnews.com/livestre ... l?chanId=7
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- Posts: 516
- Joined: 24 Dec 2003, 00:00
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
May he rest in peace!!
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Correct. Since the news was released that the pilot effectively "died" during the flight we can assume there was at least one doctor on board who declared the pilot dead. AFAIK only a doctor can declare somebody as deceased. Since this was the case the emergency is actually gone and the plane can continue the route it was flying. They will get a priortity landing before other planes when they actually arrive but that's it. No emergency landing, no diversion, just a regular landing by the 2 other pilots on board.tolipanebas wrote:Where too?
The captain may have died deep into the flight, well over the ocean...
Since there is no real urgency any longer (the poor guy sadly passed away), there's no need to go off-route and land asap somewhere in the arctic regions at a small emergency airport; better just continue to the planned destination (and well know home-base) while causing minimal disruption to everybody on the plane.
It would have probably been different when there was no doctor on board. Since only a doctor (unless the rules in the USA are different) can declare sombody dead there will be actually an inflight emergency (even if the person is actually dead) and on such case I can assume a diversion is necessary.
Re: Captain of CO061 (BRU to EWR) of this morning died in flight
Indeed. There was a public call in the cabin, and "a few doctors" went to the cockpit. One of them was the Belgian radiologist Julien Struyven. He used the onboard cardiac defibrillator, but it failed. His conclusion was heart attack.Bralo20 wrote:Correct. Since the news was released that the pilot effectively "died" during the flight we can assume there was at least one doctor on board who declared the pilot dead. AFAIK only a doctor can declare somebody as deceased. Since this was the case the emergency is actually gone and the plane can continue the route it was flying. They will get a priortity landing before other planes when they actually arrive but that's it. No emergency landing, no diversion, just a regular landing by the 2 other pilots on board.tolipanebas wrote:Where too?
The captain may have died deep into the flight, well over the ocean...
Since there is no real urgency any longer (the poor guy sadly passed away), there's no need to go off-route and land asap somewhere in the arctic regions at a small emergency airport; better just continue to the planned destination (and well know home-base) while causing minimal disruption to everybody on the plane.
It would have probably been different when there was no doctor on board. Since only a doctor (unless the rules in the USA are different) can declare sombody dead there will be actually an inflight emergency (even if the person is actually dead) and on such case I can assume a diversion is necessary.
Source for this info:
http://www.nieuwsblad.be/Article/Detail ... =GPC2BKD2B