The Bureau of Aircraft Accident Archives <
https://www.baaa-acro.com/ > maintains a searchable data base that archives aircraft accidents
worldwide by date, aircraft type, registration, operator, region, and number of fatalities, if any, along with other search parameters. Details and narratives from NTSB notifications, or other official accident reports, are included in a
Details section.
The quote below is from the
Details of a Navajo Chieftain that lost a wing flap in flight. The pilot declared an emergency and made a forced landing without fatalities. This situation would be pretty much equivalent to losing an engine through an explosion and fire, declaring an emergency to ATC, and making a forced landing as happened in Russell M. Nelson's story. Both events significantly affected the airworthiness of the respective aircraft and required an emergency landing not at an airport. Had the Israeli aircraft not been a total loss, both would have required major repair and re-certification of airworthiness.
https://www.baaa-acro.com/ wrote: En route, the pilot informed ATC that he lost a flap and elected to make an emergency landing. The twin engine airplane crash landed north of Lake Tiberias (Sea of Galilee) and was damaged beyond repair. All occupants escaped with no or minor injuries.
If the aircraft from Russell M. Nelson's story had landed in a farmer's field, it would have required major repair as a result of the engine "explosion" and subsequent fire, as well as the fact that the aircraft with a burned out engine would have required recovery including partial disassembly and transport for repair. Alternatively, if the damage were typical of low wing twins landing in fields (as shown below), it could well have been a write off. The image is of a fully airworthy Navajo Chieftain that landed in a farmer’s field with no fatalities.
This aircraft was fully operational when it landed. No burned out engine. No lost wing flap. The pilots were suspected of drug trafficking and apparently landed to evade identification by a police aircraft. When the plane was finally found, the pilots were gone and so were the drugs, if any. The damage was due to the ground surface conditions. The aircraft was assumed to be a write off.
Had RMNs aircraft really landed in a farmer’s field, especially when limping along on one engine, making it difficult to maintain wings level during the landing flare, this kind of damage would be anticipated. (Note the damage to the nearside wing tip with engines operational - as indicated by the damage to all three prop blades.)
Even without this likely kind of damage and without personal injuries, the required notification of the NTSB because of the engine fire, and the required re-certification of airworthiness after major repair and reassembly, would mean the event that Russell M. Nelson described in 1976 would have been picked up in the baaa-arco data base.
Below is a listing of the Piper Navajo Chieftain accidents reported worldwide during 1976, as contained in this data base, including the last report of 1975 and the first report of 1977.
Dr. Moore provided documentation showing that the Navajo Chieftain was one of the aircraft that SkyWest flew on the SLC to Cedar City and St. George routes in 1976. The history section of the SkyWest website describes the acquisition of Navajo Chieftains and images from the time show these aircraft on the SkyWest ramp.
A search of the data base by
Operator for SkyWest from 1974 onwards returned only three accidents, all in Twin Turboprop Swearingen commuter aircraft. The accident with no fatalities was attributed to flight crew failure to maintain adequate altitude. The same could be said for the hapless pilot in Russell M. Nelson’s story who ended up landing in a field instead of at Delta Municipal Airport which would have been his alternative. The three SkyWest accidents are listed below.
Of the approximate 3,400 Navajos built between 1967 and 1984, approximately 1,500 were Chieftains. A total of 149 Navajo Chieftain accidents were reported in North America from 1974 until the present. The total number Navajo Chieftain fatalities recorded in North America from 1974 to present was 308. In North America, 28% of the reported accidents involving Navajo Chieftains did not involve fatalities.
Had the events Russell M. Nelson described actually occurred, the resulting NTSB notifications would have appeared in the
www.baaa-acro.com data base. The only accidents reported for SkyWest were the three listed above.
No Navajo Chieftain accidents were reported in the State of Utah over the period from 1974 to present.