British Columbia

Flight path taken by B.C. pilot before crash not authorized: Sydney Seaplanes owner

North Vancouver pilot Gareth Morgan was a pilot for Sydney Seaplanes in Australia. The de Havilland Beaver he was flying crashed near Sydney on New Year's Eve, claiming all six lives on board.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau's preliminary report ruled out bird strike, contaminated fuel problems

Pilot Gareth Morgan of North Vancouver was killed along with his five British passengers when the small plane he was flying crashed near Sydney on New Year's Eve. (Gareth Morgan/Instagram)

The owner of a seaplane that crashed off the coast of Australia on New Year's Eve says the flight path taken by the B.C. pilot was not authorized.

Forty-four-year-old Gareth Morgan of North Vancouver was killed along with his five British passengers when the de Havilland Beaver crashed near Sydney.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau released a preliminary report Wednesday ruling out a bird strike, contaminated fuel and the plane breaking up in flight, but does not suggest a likely cause of the crash.

Sydney Seaplanes CEO Aaron Shaw says the key question is why Morgan was flying in a bay surrounded by steep terrain that had no exit and why an experienced pilot suddenly entered a steep right turn before the plane nosedived into the water.

The plane had an earlier fatal crash in 1996 while operating as a crop duster in rural Australia that was blamed on the pilot stalling the aircraft.