US pilots to be retried for Brazil airline crash

 
No Author Published: October 9, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

SAO PAULO (AP) — Two American pilots of a business jet will be retried for their role in a 2006 airline crash that killed 154 people on an airliner in Brazil, the federal prosecutor's office said Tuesday.

photo -   FILE - In this Dec. 9, 2006 file photo, Joseph Lepore, right, and Jan Paladino, both U.S. pilots who were detained in Brazil for more than two months following a midair collision that killed 154 people, embrace as they are greeted by friends and family upon returning to Long Island MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma, N.Y. The two pilots will be retried in absentia on Oct. 15, 2012 for their role in a 2006 airline crash that killed 154 people in Brazil, the federal prosecutor's office in Brazil said Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Ed Betz, File)
FILE - In this Dec. 9, 2006 file photo, Joseph Lepore, right, and Jan Paladino, both U.S. pilots who were detained in Brazil for more than two months following a midair collision that killed 154 people, embrace as they are greeted by friends and family upon returning to Long Island MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma, N.Y. The two pilots will be retried in absentia on Oct. 15, 2012 for their role in a 2006 airline crash that killed 154 people in Brazil, the federal prosecutor's office in Brazil said Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Ed Betz, File)

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Pilots Joseph Lepore of Bay Shore, New York, and Jan Paladino of Westhampton Beach, New York, will be retried in absentia Monday, a statement released by the prosecutor's office said.

The two were allowed to leave Brazil two months after the crash, but were convicted last year and sentenced to 52 months in prison. The sentence was commuted to community service in the United States.

The retrial was ordered after prosecutors appealed the sentence and asked that it be increased to 69 months in prison, without the possibility of it being replaced by community service.

"The sentence should be increased because despite being professionals the defendants kept the aircraft's anti-collision system turned off for almost one hour, thus causing the accident," the statement quotes prosecutor Osnir Belice as saying.

The two pilots have insisted anti-collision system and transponder on the business jet they were flying were never turned off. They deny any wrongdoing.

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