The families of people killed in a plane crash have blasted the pilot’s bid to reinstate his flying license more than eight years after the incident.
Andrew Hill, 59, was piloting a 1950s Hawker Hunter jet at the Shoreham Airshow when it exploded into a fireball on the A27 following a botched loop-the-loop attempt on August 22, 2015.
Mr Hill miraculously survived the crash, which claimed the lives of 11 other people, after the cockpit was torn from the aircraft on impact. In 2019 a jury unanimously cleared him of manslaughter.
But the former Royal Air Force instructor now wants to return to the cockpit and is seeking to reinstate his pilot’s licence with the Civil Aviation Authority, according to The Sun.
The move has angered the families of the victims, who argue that the pilot should bever be allowed to fly again ‘out of respect’ for them and their loved ones.
Andrew Hill, 59, was piloting a 1950s Hawker Hunter jet at the Shoreham Airshow when it exploded into a fireball on the A27 following a botched loop-the-loop attempt in 2015
Footage filmed by spectators showed the 1950s Hawker Hunter seconds before the crash
Footage of the crash shows the horrific moment the 1950s jet came down on the busy road
Graham Mallinson, 72, a retired engineer Mr Mallinson, from Newick, near Lewes, was one of 11 to die in the crash.
His son, Anthony, told The Sun: ‘You’d think, out of respect for all of our loved ones lost he would just let this one go now and just draw a line under it. We’re trying to draw a line under it.
‘Why is he still continuing to put us through this stress and worry?
‘To try and want to fly, knowing how the world sees him as a pilot and what happened, you’d think he’d want to go away into a corner and not be heard of.’
‘You’d think, out of respect for all of our loved ones lost he would just let this one go now and just draw a line under it. We’re trying to draw a line under it.
‘Why is he still continuing to put us through this stress and worry?
‘To try and want to fly, knowing how the world sees him as a pilot and what happened, you’d think he’d want to go away into a corner and not be heard of.’
‘We were shocked but we weren’t entirely surprised either, knowing the character that he is.
‘We all, as a collaborative of families, feel extremely strongly that he never has his pilot’s licence reinstated out of respect for all of us, the families and all of our loved ones lost. He shouldn’t be anywhere near a cockpit.’
The plane came down on the A27 after attempting a loop-the-loop near the south coast town
Chilling footage showed the huge jet just moments before he landed on the busy A-road
A huge cloud of black smoke and red flames shot up into the sky moments after the crash happened at the airshow
The flames from the Hawker Hunter aircraft can be seen burning through the vegetation in the surrounding area
Worthing United footballer Matthew Grimstone, 23, and his teamate Jacob Schilt, 23, weretravelling together in a car to a 3pm home game against Loxwood FC when they were caught up in the crash.
Matthew’s father Phil said: ‘It’s the ninth Christmas without our loved ones, which is bloody hard because Matthew loved Christmas.
‘Since then, Christmas is cold. You know? We got a couple of grandkids. So they help a lot.
‘But it’ll never be the same again. We just wait for January 2nd, really and go all over again.’
The Sun reported that the makers of a TV documentary about the crash, named Fatal Flight: Shoreham, found out about Hill’s attempt to reinstate his licence.
The newspaper added that he is expected to be issued a decision on whether he can fly again in early 2024.
During the trial, prosecutors had claimed the 2015 crash was due to ‘pilot error’ and although Mr Hill was normally considered ‘careful and competent’, he had taken ‘risks’ in the past.
They suggested he sometimes played ‘fast and loose’ with the rules and may have had a ‘more cavalier attitude to safety than was appropriate’.
Pictures from the aftermath of the crash showed debris strewn across the two-lane road
In 2017 a report by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch also found the disaster was caused by pilot error after the plane was too slow and too low during a loop manoeuvre.
But Mr Hill, an experienced former RAF instructor and British Airways captain, said he took a ‘very structured, disciplined approach’ to display flying.
He told jurors he sometimes held back from flights he was not comfortable with carrying out, adding: ‘We have our strengths and weaknesses.’
Mr Hill said he thinks about the tragedy every day and it was a ‘dominant’ thought in his mind. He said he never intended to cause any risk to anybody.
The victims were Maurice Abrahams, 76; Dylan Archer, 42; Tony Brightwell, 53; Matthew Grimstone, 23; Matt Jones, 24; Graham Mallinson, 72; Daniele Polito, 23; Mark Reeves, 53; Jacob Schilt, 23; Richard Smith, 26; and Mark Trussler, 54, who all lived in Sussex.