A U.S. Coast Guard boat and Kitsap County Sheriff boat search an area Sept. 5, 2022, near Freeland on Whidbey Island north of Seattle where a chartered floatplane crashed the day before, killing 10 people. On Thursday the National Transportation Safety Board confirmed that a mechanical issue caused the seaplane to crash. (AP Photo/Stephen Brashear)

A U.S. Coast Guard boat and Kitsap County Sheriff boat search an area Sept. 5, 2022, near Freeland on Whidbey Island north of Seattle where a chartered floatplane crashed the day before, killing 10 people. On Thursday the National Transportation Safety Board confirmed that a mechanical issue caused the seaplane to crash. (AP Photo/Stephen Brashear)

Failure of single component caused seaplane crash

Ten died in wreck off Whidbey Island

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — U.S. investigators have confirmed that a mechanical issue caused the seaplane crash that killed 10 people off Whidbey Island last year.

The National Transportation Safety Board, which investigated the Sept. 4, 2022, crash, said Thursday that a single component of a critical flight control system failed, causing an unrecoverable, near-vertical descent into Puget Sound’s Mutiny Bay near Whidbey Island.

A torso that washed upon Dungeness Spit on Sept. 16 was identified as belonging to one of the passengers who died in the crash: Patricia Ann Hicks, 66, of Spokane. She was a retired schoolteacher and partner of civil rights activist Sandy Williams, according to Spokane television station KXLY. Williams, also of Spokane, also died in the crash.

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Others who died in the wreck include pilot Jason Winters, Ross Mickel, his pregnant wife Lauren Hilty and their child Remy Mickel, of Medina; Joanne Mera of San Diego; Rebecca and Luke Ludwig, of Excelsior, Minn.; and Gabrielle Hanna of Seattle.

About 85 percent of the aircraft was recovered from the ocean floor several weeks after the crash.

NTSB investigators examining the wreckage found that a component called an actuator, which moves the plane’s horizontal tail and controls the airplane’s pitch, had become disconnected. That failure would have made it impossible for the pilot to control the airplane.

Evidence showed the failure happened before the crash, not as a result of it, investigators concluded.

The plane was a de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter turboprop operated by Renton-based Friday Harbor Seaplanes. It was headed to the Seattle suburb of Renton from Friday Harbor, a popular tourist destination in the San Juan Islands, when it abruptly fell into Mutiny Bay and sank. The pilot and all nine passengers died.

Witnesses said, and video showed, that the plane had been level before climbing slightly and then falling, the NTSB said.

“The Mutiny Bay accident is an incredibly painful reminder that a single point of failure can lead to catastrophe in our skies,” NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said in a press release.

Weeks after the crash, the NTSB said the cause appeared to be the disconnected actuator and issued a recommendation that all operators of the DHC-3 planes immediately inspect that part of the flight control system. In early November, the FAA issued an emergency directive to operators mandating the inspections, The Seattle Times reported.

The NTSB in its final report recommends that the Federal Aviation Administration and Transport Canada require operators of those planes to install a secondary locking feature, so “this kind of tragedy never happens again,” Homendy said.

Friday Harbor Seaplanes didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment on Thursday.

Lawsuits have been filed in King County Superior Court by the family members of the victims against the aircraft’s charter operator, Friday Harbor Seaplanes; as well as the DHC-3 Otter manufacturer, de Havilland Aircraft of Canada; and the plane’s certificate holder, Viking Air — saying they are responsible for the deaths.

Nate Bingham, who is representing the Ludwigs’ families, said the plane crashed because of “an antiquated design with a single point of failure.”

The companies have not responded to requests for comment about the lawsuits. Northwest Seaplanes said last year it was “heartbroken” over the crash and was working with the FAA, NTSB and Coast Guard.

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Peninsula Daily News reporter Brian Gawley contributed to this story.

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