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Widow of Gary Knopp files cross complaint against charter company

Alaska Legislature

The widow of late Rep. Gary Knopp has filed a counter complaint against High Adventure Air Charters, the Soldotna company whose plane collided with Knopp’s last summer, resulting in seven deaths.

Representatives of four of those passengers filed lawsuits last month against Helen Knopp and the Knopp estate, alleging Knopp was negligent because he was flying his private plane without a valid medical certificate.

The cross complaint, filed today, counters the claims made against Knopp in the lawsuit. It also alleges High Adventure Air Charters and Gregory Bell, who was piloting the charter plane, were negligent and caused the crash.

Knopp’s plane and the charter plane collided above Soldotna last July, killing Knopp and Bell. The crash also killed passengers Kristen Wright, Caleb Hulsey, MacKay Hulsey and Heather Hulsey, all of South Carolina. David Rogers, a Kansas guide, also died in the crash.

There are multiple lawsuits in motion against Knopp, Bell and High Adventure Air Charters on behalf of the victims, including one that was already settled in court. But this is the first complaint naming Gary Knopp as a victim of negligence.

Alaska law allows a jury to rule multiple parties partially responsible and distribute harms and losses accordingly.

The National Transportation Safety Board is still investigating the cause of the crash. The board found that Knopp had a history of vision problems, which barred him from receiving a medical certification in 2012. 

A recent reportfrom the board also found the charter plane involved in the crash did not have an Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast, a technology that allows planes to send and receive three-dimensional data about where they are in the airspace. It was not a requirement for either plane involved in the crash but the board says in its analysis it could have helped the planes avoid the crash.

Sabine Poux is a producer and reporter for the Brave Little State podcast of Vermont Public. She was formerly news director and evening news host at KDLL in Kenai.

Originally from New York, Sabine has lived and reported in Argentina and Vermont and Kenai.
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