Author of the article: Steph Crosier
Publishing date: Mar 04, 2021 • March 4, 2021 • 3 minute read The wreckage of the Piper PA32 that crashed in Kingston on Nov. 27, 2019, was transported to the Transportation Safety Board s Richmond Hill office for further examination. Seven people died in the crash. Photo by (Transportation Safety Board/Supplied Photo)
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An investigation into the airplane crash that took the lives of seven people, including three children, in November 2019 has led the Transportation Safety Board to highlight the dangers of flying using visual flight rules during adverse weather conditions.
At 5:05 p.m. on Nov. 27, 2019, a small Piper PA-32-260, flown by Otabek Oblokulov of Houston crashed into a wooded area in Kingston’s west end. The incident took his life and the life of his wife, Zamira Boboeva, and their three children, ages 14, 10 and five, as well as Oblokulov’s brother-in-law Bobomurod Nabiev and his wife, Sabina Usman
TSB finds November 2019 plane crash caused by inexperience, poor weather
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Pilot likely disoriented before fatal 2019 Kingston crash: TSB
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Pilot likely disoriented before fatal 2019 Kingston crash: TSB
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