Drunk snow remover driver may have caused jet crash killing Total CEO
The driver of the snow remover is being questioned
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A four-seat Falcon-300 airplane en route from Moscow to Paris collided at 7.57pm GMT during takeoff at Moscow airport Vnukovo on October 20 with a snow removing machine, caught fire and fell onto the runway
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASS Three crewmembers and France’s oil giant Total CEO Christophe de Margerie died in the jet’s crash
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASS Detectives are probing an error of flight controllers and actions of the snow removal machine driver as main causes of the crash
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASS Earlier it was reported that flight recorders had been found at the crash site
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASS The Investigative Committee’s Moscow inter-regional transport investigative department opened a criminal case for violation of air traffic safety rules and aircraft steering rules that entailed death of two and more people through negligence
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASS Photo: An officer seen at a check-point of the terminal of Moscow's Vnukovo-3 airport, the crash site of Dassault Falcon 50 aircraft
© Sergei Savostyanov/TASS Photo: Christophe de Margerie (archive)
© EPA/YOAN VALAT Photo: Dassault Falcon 50 F-GLSA
© Marina Lystseva/file image/TASS