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Concorde crash trial set to open | Concorde crash trial set to open |
(about 2 hours later) | |
US airline Continental and five individuals go on trial in France later over the crash of an Air France Concorde nearly 10 years ago. | |
The jet took off in flames from Paris Charles de Gaulle airport and crashed minutes later, killing 113 people. | |
An official report said Concorde had hit a metal strip from a Continental plane that had taken off earlier. | |
But Continental's lawyers say they can prove the supersonic jet caught fire before it struck the titanium strip. | |
The stricken Concorde flight 4590 crashed in the town of Gonesse in July 2000, hitting a hotel and killing four people there as well as all 109 on board. | |
Fleet grounded | |
Most of the passengers were German tourists heading to New York to join a luxury cruise to the Caribbean. Nine French crew members also died. | Most of the passengers were German tourists heading to New York to join a luxury cruise to the Caribbean. Nine French crew members also died. |
The entire fleet of Concordes was grounded until an inquiry established that one of the plane's tyres had burst, causing debris to shoot out and rupture a fuel tank. | |
Leaking kerosene then ignited and caused the catastrophe. | Leaking kerosene then ignited and caused the catastrophe. |
After nearly a year and a half out of service, in November 2001, the jets took to the air once more with new re-enforced fuel tanks, but inquiries continued. | After nearly a year and a half out of service, in November 2001, the jets took to the air once more with new re-enforced fuel tanks, but inquiries continued. |
The crash occurred shortly after take-off from Charles de Gaulle airport | The crash occurred shortly after take-off from Charles de Gaulle airport |
In December 2004 a judicial investigation concluded that a piece of metal left on the runway by another aircraft had caused one of Concorde's tyres to burst and shred. | |
Investigators said the 43cm (17in) metal strip had fallen from the engine casing of a Continental Airlines DC-10 and in March 2008 a French public prosecutor asked judges to bring manslaughter charges. | |
Houston-based Continental Airlines is denying responsibility. | |
Olivier Metzner, a lawyer for Continental, said he would challenge the official view that the metal strip led to the crash. | |
"We are going to fight it and establish that the Concorde caught fire eight seconds before this scrap of metal met with the Concorde - so about 700m (2,300ft) before," he said. | |
This is denied by Air France, which is not facing charges. | |
Individuals charged | |
As well as Continental, five individuals are being prosecuted. | |
They include John Taylor, the Continental mechanic who allegedly fitted the metal strip to the DC-10, and Stanley Ford, a maintenance official from the airline. | They include John Taylor, the Continental mechanic who allegedly fitted the metal strip to the DC-10, and Stanley Ford, a maintenance official from the airline. |
Also facing charges are Concorde's former chief engineer Jacques Herubel, and Henri Perrier, a former head of the Concorde division at Aerospatiale - now part of the aerospace company EADS. | |
Mr Perrier was placed under investigation in 2005 after being accused of being told about faults with the jet but doing nothing about them. | Mr Perrier was placed under investigation in 2005 after being accused of being told about faults with the jet but doing nothing about them. |
In 2001 he said: "Nothing we knew would ever have led us to believe such a catastrophe could happen. This was a catastrophic mishap." | In 2001 he said: "Nothing we knew would ever have led us to believe such a catastrophe could happen. This was a catastrophic mishap." |
Claude Frantzen, a former member of France's civil aviation watchdog, is the fifth individual defendant. | Claude Frantzen, a former member of France's civil aviation watchdog, is the fifth individual defendant. |
Only some of the victims' families will be represented at the hearings, as many took compensation from Air France after the crash in return for not taking legal action. | Only some of the victims' families will be represented at the hearings, as many took compensation from Air France after the crash in return for not taking legal action. |
The trial, in Pontoise, near Paris, is expected to last four months. | |
The disaster was the only crash ever to involve a Concorde supersonic airliner. | |
Air France and British Airways retired their Concorde fleets in 2003. |