Crash Earlier on 2 June 1994, the helicopter and crew had carried out a trooping flight, as it was considered to be safer for British troops to fly around in certain parts of Northern Ireland at the time due to the threat posed by
Provisional IRA attacks. This mission was safely accomplished and they returned to
RAF Aldergrove (outside Belfast, Northern Ireland) at 15:20. They took off for Inverness at 17:42. Weather en route was forecast to be clear except in the
Mull of Kintyre area. The crew made contact with military air traffic control (ATC) in Scotland at 17:55. Around 18:00, Chinook ZD576 flew into a hillside in dense fog. The pilots were
Flight Lieutenants Jonathan Tapper, 28, and Richard Cook, 30, both
United Kingdom Special Forces pilots. There were two other crew. The helicopter was carrying 25 British intelligence experts from
MI5, the
Royal Ulster Constabulary and the
British Army, from Aldergrove to attend a conference at
Fort George (near Inverness) in Scotland. At the time of the accident,
Air Chief Marshal Sir William Wratten called it "the largest peacetime tragedy the RAF had suffered". In the immediate aftermath of the accident, one commentator stated that the loss of so many top level Northern Ireland intelligence officers in one stroke was a huge blow to the
John Major government, "temporarily confounding" its campaign against the IRA. That the crash killed so many British intelligence experts, without any witnesses in the foggy conditions, led to considerable speculation and
conspiracy theories being devised regarding the potential of a
cover-up. Among these were accusations that
wake turbulence from a top-secret
hypersonic US aircraft had been responsible for the crash, while another postulated that it was a deliberate assassination of the intelligence operatives on board in order to facilitate negotiations with
republican factions during the then on-going
Northern Ireland peace process.
Victims The crash resulted in the deaths of 29 people: four Royal Air Force crew members and 25 passengers from the British Army, Royal Ulster Constabulary, and the Security Service.
Royal Air Force crew • Flight Lieutenant Jonathan Paul Tapper • Flight Lieutenant Richard David Cook • Master Air Loadmaster Graham William Forbes • Sergeant Kevin Andrew Hardie
British Army Intelligence Corps and attached units • Lieutenant Colonel Richard Lawrence Gregory-Smith • Lieutenant Colonel John Tobias MBE • Lieutenant Colonel George Victor Alexander Williams MBE, QGM • Colonel Christopher John Biles QGM, BEM • Major Richard Allen (Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment) • Major Christopher John Dockerty (Prince of Wales’s Own Regiment of Yorkshire) • Major Anthony Robert Hornby MBE (Queen’s Lancashire Regiment) • Major Roy Pugh MBE • Major Gary Paul Sparks (Royal Artillery)
Royal Ulster Constabulary (Special Branch) • Assistant Chief Constable John Charles Brian Fitzsimons MBE • Detective Chief Superintendent Desmond Patrick Conroy QGM, BEM • Detective Chief Superintendent Maurice McLaughlin Neilly • Detective Superintendent Philip George Davidson • Detective Superintendent Robert Patrick Foster • Detective Superintendent John Turbitt Phoenix • Detective Superintendent William Rutherford Gwilliam • Detective Inspector Dennis Stanley Bunting • Detective Inspector Kevin Michael Magee • Detective Inspector Stephen Davidson
Security Service • Martin George Dalton • John Robert Deverell CB, MBE • Anne Catherine Macdonald • Michael Bruce Maltby • Stephen Lewis Rickard • John Stuart Haynes MBE
Initial inquiry In 1995, an RAF board of inquiry that investigated the incident determined that there was no conclusive evidence to determine the cause of the crash. An immediate suspicion that the helicopter could have been shot down by the
Provisional IRA, with their known
Strela 2 surface-to-air missile capability, had been quickly ruled out by investigators. A review of the evidence, carried out by two Air Chief Marshals of the Royal Air Force, found the two pilots to have been guilty of
gross negligence by flying too fast and too low in thick fog. Both the incident and the first inquiry have been subject to controversy and dispute, primarily as to whether the crash had been caused by pilot error or by a mechanical failure. The 2011 Parliamentary report found the reviewing officers to have failed to correctly adhere to the standard of proof of "absolutely no doubt" in deciding the question of negligence. ==Subsequent inquiries==