CBS NEWS
Jenni Rivera's drivers license is seen on ground at site where plane apparently carrying Rivera and six others crashed near Iturbide, Mexico Dec. 12, 2012
Mexico's top transportation official says a plane carrying
Mexican-American music superstar Jenni Rivera plunged almost vertically
from more than 28,000 feet and hit the ground in a nose-dive at more
than 600 miles an hour.
Gerardo Ruiz Esparza, Mexico's
secretary of communications and transportation, offered the first
detailed accounts of the moments leading up to the crash that killed
Rivera and six other people aboard the Learjet on Sunday in northern
Mexico.
Ruiz told Radio Formula that the plane hit the
ground 1.2 miles from where it began falling, meaning it plummeted at a
nearly 45 degree angle.
He says: "The plane practically nose-dived. The impact must have been terrible."
Ruiz said the pilot of the plane, Miguel Perez Soto, had a valid
Mexican pilot's license that would have expired in January. Photos of a
temporary pilot's certificate issued by the U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration and found amid the wreckage said that Perez was 78.
Ruiz
said there is no age limit for flying a civil aviation aircraft, though
for commercial flights it's 65. In the United States it's unusual for a
pilot to be 78.
The extremely high speeds at which
Learjets can fly - close to the speed of sound - make them especially
challenging to fly, pilots and safety experts said.
"These
aircraft require an awful lot of skill to fly and don't leave a lot of
margin for error," said Lee Collins, a cargo airline pilot and executive
vice president of the Coalition of Airline Pilot Associations in
Washington.
He said that in situations in which a pilot
loses control of an aircraft, the plane could "get into a high-speed
dive and inadvertently go through the speed of sound." Collins said.
One
possible cause for a nose dive like the one described by Mexican
officials would be a drastic failure of the flight controls - the
ailerons, elevators and stabilizers, said former NTSB board member John
Goglia, an aviation safety expert.
"High performance
airplanes by their nature have issues," Goglia said. "The airplane flies
faster than the human mind (can keep up) sometimes. ... It takes a lot
of skill to stay in front of that airplane."
Mexican authorities were performing DNA tests Tuesday on remains
believed to belong to Rivera and the others killed when her plane went
down in northern Mexico early Sunday morning.
Investigators said it would take days to piece together the wreckage of the plane carrying Rivera and find out why it went down.
The
U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a team to
help investigate the crash of the Learjet 25, which disintegrated on
impact in the rugged terrain in Nuevo Leon state in northern Mexico.
Human
remains found in the wreckage were moved to a hospital in Monterrey,
the closest major city to the crash, and Rivera's brother Lupillo was
driven past a crowd of reporters to the area where the remains were
being kept. He did not speak to the press.
A state
official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing
investigation, said investigators were testing DNA from the remains in
order to provide families with definitive confirmation of the deaths of
their loved ones.
"We're in the process of picking up
the fragments and we have to find all the parts," Argudin told reporters
on Monday. "Depending on weather conditions it would take us at least
10 days to have a first report and many more days to have a report by
experts."
In an interview on Radio Formula, Alejandro
Argudin, head of Mexico's civil aviation agency, said Mexican
investigators weren't sure yet if the Learjet had been equipped with
flight data recorders. He also said there had been no emergency call
from the plane before the crash. In the U.S., the plane would not have
been required to have a flight data recorder or a cockpit voice
recorder.
Fans of Rivera, who sold 15 million records
and was loved on both sides of the border for her down-to-earth style
and songs about heartbreak and overcoming pain, put up shrines to her
with burning candles, flowers and photographs in cities from Hermosillo,
Mexico to Los Angeles.
Some Spanish-language radio stations played her songs nonstop.
A brother, Juan Rivera, as well as mother Rosa Saavedra, still held on to hope that she would be found alive.
"I
still trust God that perhaps the body isn't hers," Saavedra said in a
press conference Tuesday, adding that she could have been kidnapped and
another woman was at the crash site. "We're hoping it's not true, that
perhaps someone took her and left another woman there."
The
43-year-old California-born Rivera known as the "Diva de la Banda" died
as her career peaked. She was perhaps the most successful female singer
in grupero, a male-dominated Mexico regional style, and had branched
out into acting and reality television.
Besides being a
singer, she appeared in the indie film Filly Brown, which was shown at
the Sundance Film Festival, and was filming the third season of "I love
Jenni," which followed her as she shared special moments with her
children and as she toured through Mexico and the United States.
The
Learjet 25, number N345MC, with Rivera aboard was en route from
Monterrey to Toluca, outside Mexico City, when it was reported missing
about 10 minutes after takeoff.
Aviation website FlightAware.com shows that the plane flew from
Houston to Toluca on August 31 and had not returned to the U.S. since
then. Ruiz said Mexican officials are investigating why the U.S. plane
was carrying passengers between two Mexican destinations, something
that's against regulation. U.S- registered planes can only fly paying
passengers internationally into Mexico. He said the plane's owner,
Starwood Management of Las Vegas, said Rivera was not renting the jet,
but was receiving a free flight because Starwood thought it would
promote the aircraft, which was for sale.
That would be allowed under Mexican law, Ruiz said.
"The
Civil Aviation Department has instructions to investigate this point
specifically," he said, adding that he's also asking other authorities
to verify the company's story about why one of its planes was flying
between Mexican destinations.
According to the U.S.
National Transportation Safety Board, the same plane was substantially
damaged in a 2005 landing mishap at Amarillo International Airport in
Texas. It hit a runway distance marker after losing directional control.
There were four aboard but no injuries. It was registered to a company
in Houston, Texas, as the time.
Starwood has been the
subject of a lawsuit and investigations, though none so far have
centered on the plane that carried Rivera.
Another of its planes was seized in September by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in McAllen, Texas.
A
federal lawsuit in Nevada filed by QBE Insurance Corp. alleges that a
Starwood aircraft was ordered seized by the DEA when it landed in
McAllen, Texas, from Mexico on Sept. 12. The New York-based insurer sued
in October to rescind coverage for the Hawker 700 jet.
Starwood, in a court filing, acknowledged that the DEA was involved in the seizure of the aircraft.
QBE,
based in New York, said the DEA also seized a Starwood-owned Gulfstream
G-1159A - insured by another company - when it landed in Tucson from
Mexico in February. Starwood said in its court filing that it didn't
have enough information to address the allegation.
Nevada
secretary of state records list only one Starwood officer - Norma
Gonzalez - but QBE alleges that the company is owned and managed by Ed
Nunez, who, according to the lawsuit, is also known as Christian Esquino
and had a long criminal history.
Starwood rejected the insurer's description of Nunez's role at the company.
According
to QBE's lawsuit, Esquino pleaded guilty in federal court in Orlando,
Florida, in 1993 to conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine.
QBE
said Esquino also served two years in prison after pleading guilty to
conspiracy to commit fraud involving an aircraft in Southern California
in 2004. QBE said Esquino's attorney stated in court back then that his
client had been under investigation by the DEA for more than a year.
Starwood
said in its court filing that it didn't have enough information to
address either the Florida or Southern California case against Esquino.
George Crow, an attorney for Starwood, did not immediately respond to phone and email messages left after business hours Monday.