Preliminary reports suggest that the Dash 8 was instructed to hold short of 34R and instead taxied onto the runway.
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/34 ... spN_qs4jaQtranslated from Japanese, actual phraseology may differ:
- 416039627_745703087589733_6093820414031066433_n.jpg (192.2 KiB) Viewed 3515 times
This is very similar (
but not identical) to the incident at KLAX back in 1991, were a USAir 737 collided with a SkyWest Metro on 24R. In that incident, the Metro was cleared into position on 24R, but not cleared for takeoff. The controller became distracted, forgot about the Metro, and cleared the 737 to land.
https://www.faa.gov/lessons_learned/tra ... nts/N388USProcedures in place at LAX allowed ground traffic to communicate directly with the local controller, bypassing the ground controller. The Skywest flight, having followed this process, was cleared into position on the runway, ready to make an intersection takeoff, but had not yet been cleared for takeoff. In searching for the associated progress strip, the local controller became preoccupied, and forgot the Skywest flight that was waiting on the runway. The controller subsequently cleared the USAir flight for landing, where it collided with the Skywest flight. Tower procedures did provide redundancy for lapses in controller attention or memory, allowing a human error to lead to the accident.
Make Orwell fiction again.