The plane burned down, and all 21 people on board were killed, including Hungarian diplomats and French professor Louis Fruhling.
Aircraft
The aircraft involved was a two-year-old four-engine turboprop Ilyushin Il-18V with serial number 2002 and registration HA-MOD. The aircraft was powered by four Ivchenko AI-20A engines. At the time of the accident, the aircraft had flown for a total of 2,363 hours.[1]
Passengers and crew
Crew
There were eight crew members on board. The captain was Hungarian István Kapitány (born 23 November 1929) who was with Malév Hungarian Airlines since 1958. The co-pilot was Hungarian János Fenesi (born 1 October 1932). He had made 4135 flying hours, including 733 on a Ilyushin Il-18 aircraft and was with Malév since 1952. The other crew members were the navigator János Koleszár (born 1928), telegrapher Gyula Szücs (born 1933), mechanics János Gadácsi (born 1922) and István Bancsi (born 1931) and two flight attendants Júlia Ferencz (born 1938) and Mária Latabár (born 1942).[1]
Passengers
There were 13 passengers onboard.[2] The passengers included Hungarian diplomats, who were in London to negotiate a British-Hungarian cultural treaty.[3][4] Also onboard the flight was French professor Louis Fruhling, born 1916 in Moselle, expert in the field of pathological anatomy. He returned, together with his wife, from an international medical conference in Budapest. He was director of the Institute for Pathological Anatomy in Strasbourg.[2][5][3][6]
Accident
On 23 November 1962 the plane departed at 7:44 (GMT) from Budapest to Frankfurt. In Frankfurt the crew went at 9:50 to the meteorological office for two hours for briefing and checking French weather reports. The pilot noted the frequent occurrences of log and stratus cloud, and the possibility of light icing. When departing from Frankfurt to Paris there were 13 passengers and crew onboard. All passengers boarded in Frankfurt.[3] The last radio contact was at 14:05.[1] At the time it was very foggy in Paris. According to officials the plane initiated the landing on its instruments.[3] During the approach to Paris with the landing gear extended and the engines nearly at full power the airplane crashed at 14:10, 6.1 kilometres east-north-east from the airport near the road from Paris to Soissons.[7][1][2]
After impact the airplane exploded with high flames visible. Farmers from the area came to the disaster but could no longer do anything.[3] Due to the heat, it was not possible to approach the airplane.[2] Due to the snow and rain the field was so muddy that vehicles could not reach the disaster site.[3] Because the place was difficult to reach, it took the fire brigade from Le Bourget three hours to arrive at the disaster scene.[4] After the fire brigade extinguished the fire, all bodies could be recovered.[2] Bodies had to be carried 500 meters to the nearest road.[3] Because the bodies were charred, identification took a long time.[4]
Weather conditions
Because of the dense fog most flights at Paris–Le Bourget Airport were cancelled during the morning.[3] Only one aircraft had landed and four aircraft had departed.[5]
Eyewitness accounts
According to eyewitnesses, the aircraft flew into high-voltage cables.[3]
In February 1964, the BEA published their findings. The investigation concluded that the aircraft had stalled while performing a high G-load manoeuvre. The BEA couldn't determine as to why this manoeuvre was performed.[1]