ExcelAire Says It’s Too Early to Blame It for Brazilian Air Tragedy

New-York based air-taxi company ExcelAire, which had kept silent, while the world raged outside with oposing news on the collision of its Legacy executive with a Boeing 737 over the Brazilian Amazon jungle has decided to talk after American lawyers began to file lawsuits against the company.

In a press-release issued this Monday, November 6, the American company starts by saying that it wishes to express its "deepest sympathies to the families that lost loved ones in the tragic accident of September 29, 2006 in Brazil."

ExcelAire through Robert Torricella, a Miami-based aviation attorney representing the firm’s pilots also says that the civil lawsuits filed or to be filed this week arising from the accident, which left 154 people dead, are premature, given that the facts surrounding the accident have not yet been fully investigated and established in a comprehensive accident investigation.

"In the face of recent confirmations that air traffic control cleared and directed the ExcelAire Legacy Jet to fly to Manaus at 37,000 feet, repeated suggestions that ExcelAire’s pilots were flying at the wrong altitude are baseless," said Torricella.

"According to international aviation regulations and norms, air traffic control directives take precedence over a written flight plan and those directives effectively amend the written flight plan. It is the flight plan cleared by air traffic control at the time of departure – and not the prior written flight plan – that governs the conduct of the flight."

He added, "Here, the flight plan cleared by air traffic control at the time of departure required the Legacy to fly all the way to Manaus at 37,000 feet and, absent contrary directives from air traffic control, the Legacy was obligated to follow its cleared flight plan. As the findings of the investigation are made public, we are confident that ExcelAire’s pilots will be exonerated."

ExcelAire, based in Ronkonkoma, NY, specializes in business jets and aircraft management. In the release it pledges its full cooperation in the investigations currently underway in Brazil.

The ExcelAire pilots have been detained in Brazil for more than five weeks. Their passports have been confiscated by the Brazilian authorities.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Rice Growers Say They Are Losing Money and Nobody Cares

In the city of Esteio, 25 km from Porto Alegre, state of Rio Grande ...

With US Crisis Arabs Save the Day for Brazil’s Granite Exporter

Brazilian granite company Mibasa located in the city of Serra, in the state of ...

Brazil New-Found Oil Will Fund Education and Anti-Poverty Programs

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, announced today, August 31st, a ...

A National Program for the Poor in Brazil Is Helping São Paulo Curb Its Favelas

One of the good effects of Bolsa Família (BOAsa fumMEElia) – a monthly allowance ...

Brazil to Give a Break to Foreign Visitors

Brazil’s government admits the possibility that it will, by the end of this year, ...

Brazil Is a Prisoner of Now with No Consideration for Tomorrow

Much before the skies were preparing for the rain, the tragedies in Rio de ...

LETTERS

In movies, plays, music, art, and literature, the Brazilian culture continues more alive than ...

Alchemy, a Brazilian Jewel Maker with International Ambitions

Alchemy, jewel and semi jewel manufacturer, based in the Brazilian city of Limeira, in ...

Brazilian Metal Company Plans to Compete with China in Arab Market

Soprano, manufacturer of iron fittings and hydraulic equipments based in the city of Farroupilha, ...

Brazil: Dirty Bomb Explodes in Workers Party’s Hands

With less than two weeks for the presidential election Brazil was again rocked by ...