Duty Calls

Report released regarding fatal parachute accident involving Bombardier Patrick Labrie

See below for Information regrading the images. 

In April, the Royal Canadian Air Force’s (RCAF) Directorate of Flight Safety, as the Airworthiness Investigative Authority for the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), issued the final report in relation to the fatal parachute accident that claimed the life of Bombardier Patrick Labrie.

The accident happened on June 17, 2019, during Exercise SWIFT RESPONSE in Cheshneigirovo, Bulgaria. Bombardier Labrie was deployed, with his unit 2nd Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery based at Garrison Petawawa.

Exercise SWIFT RESPONSE 2019 was a joint multinational airborne field training exercise led by the United States. The exercise involved a total of 5,600 troops from eight different nations, including Canada. It took place at various locations in Bulgaria, Croatia, and Romania and ran from June 11 to 24, 2019.

Bombardier Patrick Labrie lost his life on June 17, 2019, in a fatal parachute accident during Exercise SWIFT RESPONSE in Cheshneigirovo, Bulgaria. Image of Bombardier Patrick Labrie courtesy CAF.

On 16 June 2019, aircraft CC130608 departed Ramstein, Germany, to the drop zone at the Sadovo Airfield, Bulgaria (Cheshnegirovo Air Base). The mission was to conduct a night static line paratroop jump. The troops were dispatched from an altitude of 1000 feet above ground level using both the starboard and port side paratroop doors.

According to the report, during the jump, a paratrooper on the starboard side became hung-up outside the aircraft and subsequently experienced a sudden static line failure, which resulted in an uncontrolled descent. The paratrooper sustained fatal injuries.

The investigation revealed that the accident jumper experienced a bad exit from the aircraft, which caused him to become entangled in his static line and then hung up outside the plane.

A static line is a fixed cord attached to a large, stable object. It is used to open parachutes automatically for paratroopers and novice parachutists.

Paratroopers from 3rd Battalion, Royal 22e Régiment parachute from a CC-130H Hercules aircraft to maintain their skills, in the municipality of Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier on November 28, 2019. Photo: Corporal Marc-André Leclerc. Image courtesy  of CAF.

The situation went undetected by the other jumpers, the Stick Commander (a designated individual who controls paratroops from the time they enter the aircraft until their exit) and the Loadmaster (an aircrew member on civilian aircraft or military transport aircraft tasked with the safe loading, transport, and unloading of aerial cargoes).

“An interaction between the accident jumper and a subsequent jumper led to the separation/breakage of the accident jumper’s static line due to the dynamic load exceeding the maximum tensile strength of the static line,” noted the report.

The report recommended the following preventative measures:

    • re-evaluating current hung-up jumper detection and associated hung-up parachutist retrieval procedures;
    • amending publications to document aircraft equipment stowage location;
    • securing ancillary equipment when configuring the CC130J aircraft for paratrooper operations;
    • addressing the Airworthiness Program with respect to parachute operations across the CAF.

 

Show More

Julia Lennips

Julia is a journalist who is an avid reader and an artist. She is living in North Bay, ON pursing her passion for reporting.

Leave a Reply

Canadian Military Family Magazine
Close