Pilot in Buffalo crash failed exams, kept scores secret

ByABC News
May 13, 2009, 1:21 PM

WASHINGTON -- The captain of the flight that crashed near Buffalo last February would have been fired if the carrier had known that he didn't disclose failing piloting tests on his application, a senior airline official testified Wednesday.

Capt. Marvin Renslow, who was at the controls when the turboprop went out of control on Feb. 12, had failed three check rides prior to being hired by Colgan Air in 2005. But on his application he only disclosed one of the failures, according to documents released by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

"If we had known when Capt. Renslow was in training that he had falsified his application and left off two failed check rides, he would have immediately been terminated," said Colgan vice president Mary Finnigan.

Both pilots and the airline were criticized on the second day of a hearing Wednesday into the crash that killed 50 people in Clarence Center, N.Y. Documents released this week raise questions about airline training, pilot standards and the dangers of fatigue that result from having to commute long distances to work.

Co-pilot Rebecca Shaw had flown from Seattle to Newark on two overnight connecting flights on cargo carrier FedEx before reporting to work the day of the accident. She stayed at a crew rest area in Memphis from midnight to 4 a.m., according to the safety board.

"It sounds pretty horrible to me," said NTSB member Debbie Hersman.

"I think it violates the professionalism of a crewmember," said Colgan vice president Harry Mitchel under questioning by Hersman.

Mitchel said it is the responsibility of pilots to report to work well rested, but Hersman questioned whether airline policies contribute to the problem of fatigue.

The NTSB estimated that Shaw, 24, who had been hired a year before the crash, earned an annual salary of about $16,000. Some board members suggested it would have been difficult for her to afford to live in the Newark area, where she was based.

Out of 137 pilots based at Colgan's Newark operation, 93 of them live outside the local area, according to the NTSB.