Pilot who fell ill at the controls of an aircraft, leaving a passenger to land the plane, dies

Flight instructor Roy Murray one of those who helped passenger take over controls

Flight instructor Roy Murray who helped a passenger land a plane at Humberside Airport, near Grimsby, north Lincolnshire. Photograph: Anna Gowthorpe/PA.
Flight instructor Roy Murray who helped a passenger land a plane at Humberside Airport, near Grimsby, north Lincolnshire. Photograph: Anna Gowthorpe/PA.

A pilot who fell ill at the controls of a light aircraft, leaving a passenger to land the plane, has died, British police say.

The plane had taken off from a small airfield in the market town of Doncaster in northern England, about 25 miles away, early on Tuesday morning last, carrying just the pilot and the passenger. The pilot made a distress call at 6.20pm and shortly afterwards became so ill that the responsibility of landing the plane fell to the passenger, who had never flown a plane before, according to one of the two flight instructors on the ground who guided him in. Humberside police said on Wednesday that the pilot “was sadly pronounced dead last night”.

Roy Murray, who works at a flying school based at the airport, was one of those who assisted the passenger after he took over the controls. He told the BBC: “He made quite a good landing, actually. He didn’t know the layout of the aeroplane. He didn’t have lights on so he was absolutely flying blind as well.

“I think he’d flown once before as a passenger but never flown an aeroplane before.”

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He said he was conscious of making sure that the man did not panic during the landing procedure. Without instruction, Mr Murray said, the man probably “would have just gone into the ground and that would have been the end of it”.

Mr Murray described it as a “fantastic feeling” having helped to save the passenger’s life. The plane landed safely on its fourth attempt, prompting cheers in the airport control room, said Mr Murray. The airport, in north Lincolnshire, had put in place its emergency plan, involving police and fire crews.

Stuart Sykes told the BBC he had witnessed the aircraft land shortly before 8pm. “It came down with a bump, a bump, a bump, hit the front end down. I heard some crashing and it’s come to a halt,” he said.

“There were a few sparks and three or four crashes, that must have been the propeller hitting the floor. Then it uprighted again and came to a stop.”

An airport spokesman said: “The passenger flew over the airport a couple of times and then was talked down by two flight instructors and the emergency services were waiting for them when he landed safely.”

– (Guardian service)