1967 Lake Erie skydiving disaster

1967 Lake Erie skydiving disaster
1967 Lake Erie skydiving disaster is located in Ohio
Lake Erie
Ohio
Ortner Airport
Ortner Airport
Huron
Huron
Vermilion
Vermilion
Drop site (approximate)
Drop site (approximate)
1967 Lake Erie skydiving disaster (Ohio)
The actual and intended drop sites
DateAugust 27, 1967; 57 years ago (1967-08-27)
LocationLake Erie near Huron, Ohio, United States
TypeAviation accident, skydiving accident
CauseAir traffic control error and decision by pilot and divers[i] to jump through cloud cover in violation of regulations
OutcomeCongress considers greater regulation of skydiving
Casualties
16 deaths by drowning
InquiriesFatal Parachuting Accident Near Huron, Ohio, August 27, 1967: Special Investigation Report[3]
LitigationDreyer v. United States (1972),[4] affirmed as Freeman v. United States (1975)[5]
  1. ^ Skydivers found "not without fault" for jumping in National Transportation Safety Board report,[1] but found not liable in civil litigation.[2]

On August 27, 1967, eighteen skydivers mistakenly parachuted into Lake Erie, four or five nautical miles (7.5–9.3 km) from Huron, Ohio, United States, after jumping from a civilian North American B-25 Mitchell. Sixteen drowned. The plane's pilot, unable to see the surface through heavy cloud cover, had relied on guidance from the Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center, which had incorrectly advised him that he was over Ortner Airport—actually twelve to thirteen miles (19–21 km) away. Jumping through cloud cover in violation of Federal Aviation Administration rules, the skydivers were unaware that they were over water until they punched through the clouds at 4,000 feet (1,200 m). Despite efforts by many to shed heavy gear, only two were able to stay above water for long enough to be rescued.

The disaster was at the time the deadliest in the history of recreational skydiving[a] and led to congressional scrutiny into regulation of skydiving. A report by the National Transportation Safety Board faulted the pilot, and to a lesser extent the parachutists, for executing a jump through clouds, and faulted the controller for misidentifying the plane's position after confusing it with a Cessna 180 Skywagon there to photograph the jump. The United States was subsequently held liable for the controller's error; the legal case, Freeman v. United States (1975), is notable for its holding that the skydivers did not have contributory negligence because the regulations they violated were not about their own safety.

  1. ^ NTSB 1967, p. 4.
  2. ^ ALI 2005.
  3. ^ NTSB 1967.
  4. ^ Dreyer 1972.
  5. ^ Freeman 1975.
  6. ^ NYT 1983.
  7. ^ Roberts 1992. Citing data compiled by the United States Parachute Association's Parachutist magazine.


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