Poulton pilot found guilty of recklessly flying plane which crashed with passengers onboard

A pilot from Poulton who overloaded a plane causing it to crash with passengers inside has been convicted.
Robert Murgatroyd, 52, of Windy Harbour Road, Poulton-le-Fylde has been convicted after he overloaded a plane before it crashed with three passengers inside.Robert Murgatroyd, 52, of Windy Harbour Road, Poulton-le-Fylde has been convicted after he overloaded a plane before it crashed with three passengers inside.
Robert Murgatroyd, 52, of Windy Harbour Road, Poulton-le-Fylde has been convicted after he overloaded a plane before it crashed with three passengers inside.

On Saturday, September 9, 2017, pilot Robert Murgatroyd, of Windy Harbour Road, charged three men £500 each to take them to see a rare bird on the remote Island of Barra off the coast of north west Scotland.

But the men never reached their destination after the plane crashed in farmland minutes after take-off from Barton Airport in Eccles, Greater Manchester.

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On Wednesday (February 20, 2019), a jury at Manchester Crown Court found the 52-year-old guilty of overloading his Piper PA28 aircraft and endangering the lives of all on board.

Robert Murgatroyd, 52, of Windy Harbour Road, Poulton-le-Fylde has been convicted after he overloaded a plane before it crashed with three passengers inside.Robert Murgatroyd, 52, of Windy Harbour Road, Poulton-le-Fylde has been convicted after he overloaded a plane before it crashed with three passengers inside.
Robert Murgatroyd, 52, of Windy Harbour Road, Poulton-le-Fylde has been convicted after he overloaded a plane before it crashed with three passengers inside.

Following his conviction, Lancashire Police said Robert Murgatroyd was a "selfish and greedy man" who "put profit profit above the safety of his passengers".

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The incident sparked a joint investigation between GMP and the UK Civil Aviation Authority who suspected that the aircraft had been dangerously overloaded.

Enquiries revealed that the aircraft had been 420lbs over its maximum weight,

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Officers also uncovered that although Murgatroyd held a private pilot’s licence, he was not allowed to run commercial flights and this rendered his insurance void.?

Investigators also found that the flight manual inside the cockpit was not specific to that particular aircraft. ?

Today (Wednesday, February 20), following a three-week trial at Manchester Crown Square, a jury found Murgatroyd guilty of a number of offences.

These include recklessly endangering the safety of an aircraft, flying an aircraft without an air operator certificate, flying without an appropriate licence and flying without the aircraft flight manual.?

Murgatroyd is due to be sentenced on Friday, March 15.?

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Sergeant Lee Westhead, senior investigation officer from GMP’s Serious Collision Investigation Unit, said: “Murgatroyd is a selfish and greedy man who put his profit above the safety of his passengers and those on the ground, including people using the M62.?

“He knew the risks and went ahead and took them anyway – his arrogance knows no bounds.?

“It is fortunate that no one lost their lives during this dangerous airmanship and he is a disgrace to law-abiding aviators who do everything they can to ensure passenger and public safety.?

“The Serious Collision Investigation Unit will not hesitate to work with partners to ensure those who break the law, and risk the lives of others, are investigated and brought to justice. Although aviation investigations are rare, they are not immune from police.?

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“I’d like to thank witnesses who came forward to help with evidence, PC Suzanne Keenan, and Simon Pollock and Anthony McKeown from the CAA’s Investigation Enforcement Team, as well as prosecuting barrister Henry Blackshaw - without them today’s judgement would not have been possible.”