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Seiji Katagiri

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Japan Air Lines Flight 350
日本航空350便
JAL Flight 350 wreckage 2.png
Wreckage of JA8061
Occurrence
Date 9 February 1982
Summary Deliberate crash by pilot
Site Haneda Airport, Tokyo, Japan
35°32′14″N 139°46′57″E / 35.53729°N 139.78244°E / 35.53729; 139.78244Coordinates: 35°32′14″N 139°46′57″E / 35.53729°N 139.78244°E / 35.53729; 139.78244
Aircraft
Aircraft type McDonnell Douglas DC-8-61
Operator Japan Air Lines
IATA flight No. JL350
ICAO flight No. JAL350
Call sign JAPAN AIR 350
Registration JA8061
Flight origin Fukuoka Airport
Destination Haneda Airport
Passengers 166
Crew 8
Fatalities 24
Survivors 150

Japan Air Lines Flight 350 (日本航空350便, Nihonkōkū 350 Bin) was a McDonnell Douglas DC-8-61, registered JA8061, on a domestic scheduled passenger flight from Fukuoka, Fukuoka Prefecture, to Tokyo in Japan. The airplane crashed 9 February 1982 on approach to Haneda Airport in Tokyo Bay, resulting in 24 fatalities. Flight 350 was the first crash for Japan Air Lines in the 1980s. The investigation traced the cause of the crash to the deliberate actions of the captain.

Flight

Crashed aircraft

The crew consisted of 35-year-old Captain Seiji Katagiri (片桐 清二 Katagiri Seiji), 33-year-old First Officer Yoshifumi Ishikawa, and 48-year-old flight engineer Yoshimi Ozaki. The cause of the crash was traced to Katagiri's deliberate crashing of the plane.

One report states that the captain engaged the inboard engines' thrust-reversers in flight. Another report states that, during descent, Katagiri "cancelled autopilot, pushed his controls forward and retarded the throttles to idle." Ishikawa and Ozaki worked to restrain Katagiri and regain control. Despite their efforts, the DC-8's descent could not be completely checked and it touched down in shallow water 510 meters (1673 feet) short of the runway. During the crash, the cockpit section of the DC-8 separated from the rest of the fuselage and continued to travel for several meters before coming to a halt.

Among the 166 passengers and 8 crew, 24 died. Following the incident, Katagiri, one of the first people to take a rescue boat, told rescuers that he was an office worker to avoid being identified as the captain. Katagiri was later found to have paranoid schizophrenia prior to the incident, which resulted in his being ruled not guilty by reason of insanity. Investigators for the Japanese government attributed the incident to a lack of proper medical examinations which allowed Katagiri to fly.

Katagiri has since been released from psychiatric care and lives near Mount Fuji.

See also

External links


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