News

USIS Washington File

21 December 1999

Text: NTSB Hall's Statement on EgyptAir Salvage Operation

(Wreckage transferred to land for analysis) (630)

The passenger remains and aircraft parts from the ill-fated EgyptAir
Flight 990 have been recovered from the ocean floor by the salvage
vessel Smit Pioneer and have been returned to land for analysis,
according to a statement released December 21 by National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Chairman Jim Hall.

The 10-day mission dredged for the 270 passengers and crew and with
its clamshell shovel lifted enough material to fill 16 20-foot by
8-foot by 8-foot containers. The recovered human remains have been
turned over to the Rhode Island State Medical Examiners Office. All
parts of the aircraft that have been recovered will be housed in a
hangar at Quonset Point, R.I. for further analysis by investigators.

"It is not possible to say at this time how much of the aircraft has
been recovered," said Hall. However, investigators believe that parts
from all areas of the aircraft have been recovered, most of which are
very small due to the extreme fragmentation of the aircraft fuselage.
Some larger pieces were recovered, including a piece of aircraft
structure almost 20 feet long.

"Once the wreckage is laid out in a hangar to dry, investigators will
examine it for potential clues to the cause of the crash. This process
will take several weeks," Hall noted.

Following is the text of Hall's remarks:

(begin text)

National Transportation Safety Board Washington, DC 20594

STATEMENT OF NTSB CHAIRMAN JIM HALL ON RETURN TO PORT OF THE SMIT
PIONEER December 21, 1999

The following statement was released this afternoon by National
Transportation Safety Board Chairman Jim Hall.

The Smit Pioneer returned to port at Quonset Point, Rhode Island at
6:00 a.m. today. It is off-loading its cargo of aircraft wreckage from
EgyptAir flight 990. Human remains that were recovered during its
10-day mission have been transferred to the jurisdiction of the Rhode
Island Medical Examiner, Dr. Elizabeth LaPosata.

As you know, the Smit Pioneer left Quonset Point on Sunday, December
12. After being positioned over the wreckage area that night, it began
recovering human remains and wreckage with a clamshell bucket. More
than 750 deployments of the bucket were completed during the mission.
Aircraft wreckage has been placed into 16 20-foot by 8-foot by 8-foot
containers, which will be moved to a hangar at Quonset Point.

It is not possible to say at this time how much of the aircraft has
been recovered. However, our investigators believe that parts from all
areas of the aircraft have been recovered, most of which are very
small due to the extreme fragmentation of the aircraft fuselage. Some
larger pieces were recovered, including a piece of aircraft structure
almost 20 feet long. Once the wreckage is laid out in a hangar to dry,
investigators will examine it for potential clues to the cause of the
crash. This process will take several weeks.

Sometime over the next two weeks, the U.S. Navy will dispatch a
submarine to video-map the wreckage recovery area to help the Board
evaluate further requirements for recovery.

I want to thank the men and women from the United States Navy, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, the National Transportation Safety
Board, EgyptAir, the U.S. Public Health Service, the Rhode Island
Medical Examiner's Office and Oceaneering Technologies for their work
aboard the ship, which encountered seas high enough on several
occasions to require the suspension of operations.

We will issue further advisories as circumstances warrant.

Note: Pool photography was conducted today of the off-loading
procedure. Please contact CBS Television News for the video pool and
either the Associated Press, Reuters or Agence France Press for still
photography.

(end text)

(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State.)