Aaliyah Pilot Had Drugs in System

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By ROGAN M. SMITH
NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) - Authorities are investigating how cocaine and alcohol
found in blood tests may have affected the pilot of a small plane that
crashed in the Bahamas last year, killing nine people - including
22-year-old singer and actress Aaliyah.

Aviation officials on Tuesday said an autopsy performed on Luis Antonio
Morales Blanes showed he had cocaine in his urine and traces of alcohol in
his stomach. The autopsy findings were released for the first time along
with the crash investigation report, the Bahamas Department of Civil
Aviation said.

Investigators are trying to figure how out the substances may have affected
the pilot at the time of the August crash. Morales, 30, was sentenced to
three years probation on charges of crack cocaine possession 12 days before
the crash.

The aviation department also said Tuesday the aircraft may not have
undergone fuel-pump wiring modifications required in August 1988.
Unidentified particles and corrosion found in the fuel filters were
"indications that routine maintenance was not being performed," the
statement said.


Aaliyah, who was already a two-time Grammy nominee for best female R&B
vocalist, was leaving the Bahamas following a video shoot when the Cessna
402-B crashed during takeoff. All nine people aboard died.

The investigative committee has not yet been able to talk to the plane's
owner of the airplane, or inspect the engine or aircraft log books, which
would show maintenance, it said.

The twin-engine plane was also overloaded by at least 700 pounds,
investigators have said. Nine people were on board, while the plane is
certified to carry up to eight including the pilot.

Inspection of the plane's engine, airframe, propeller and fuel system,
however, has shown no cause for malfunction, authorities said Tuesday.

In May, the parents of Aaliyah filed a lawsuit against Virgin Records,
alleging that negligence and recklessness caused the plane crash.

The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on behalf of Diane and
Michael Haughton, also named several video production companies and
Blackhawk International Airways, the company that operated the plane.

Neither Blackhawk nor Skystream, the plane's registered owner, had a permit
to operate commercial charter flights in the Bahamas, investigators said.

Blackhawk officials couldn't be reached for comment

Copyright 2002 Associated Press. All right reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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