Avion Pirata

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Avión Pirata
Avión Pirata in Santa Cruz Bolivia, January 2014
Type
Lockheed 049-45 Constellation
Manufacturer
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation
Construction number 2081
Registration N2520B, previously YV-C-AME
Owners and operators previously
Braniff International Airlines
8/55 - 11/60
Last flight 30 July 1961
Fate converted to a library and later a bank branch
Preserved at
Santa Cruz, Bolivia
17°46′32″S 63°10′26″W / 17.77565°S 63.17395°W / -17.77565; -63.17395 (Avion Pirata)

Avión Pirata (Pirate Airplane) is the name given by

Santa Cruz, Bolivia, during 1961. The airplane has remained in Bolivia since 1961, when it was forced to land by the Bolivian Air Force
after a chase in which an Air Force Captain died in a crash.

The airplane has become a tourist attraction, having undergone several changes of ownership, and has also become an urban legend among Bolivians.

The airplane

The airplane is a Lockheed Constellation with the registration N2520B, which at the time of the incident was registered to

model airplane of this aircraft exists, as Corgi Toys released a model of the Constellation under Braniff livery.[2]

The fateful flight

During some time before N2520B's final flight, Constellations had been conducting night flights to El Trompillo Airport. Locals believe that these transported goods to

Arica, Chile, among other destinations, from the United States, such as cigarettes, textiles, whiskey, socks, television sets and contraband items.[3]

On Saturday, 29 July 1961, the airplane landed at El Trompillo Airport, and rested there until 30 July, when it took off southward. The plane's occupants had not filed a flight plan; instead they said they were carrying a practice-only flight. Immediately after take-off, Trompillo control tower alerted the Fuerza Aérea Boliviana, which sent P-51 Mustang fighters to chase it. The P-51 pilots and the control tower asked the plane's crew to fly to Cochabamba, but the crew ignored the request.

The P-51s then proceeded to shoot at the airplane, making the Constellation crew attempt an emergency landing at El Trompillo Airport. As the aircraft descended, the crew dived in a final attempt at getting the P-51's to call off their pursuit, causing one pilot, Captain Alberto Peredo Céspedes, to crash fatally. The Constellation itself landed at El Trompillo, and the crew members were arrested on site. The aircraft's tires were blown up and the local military airline,

TAM, flew soldiers in from Cochabamba to prevent the airport from being overtaken by guerrillas.[4]

Crew trial

Following the incident, Bolivian President

dishonorable discharge
of 130 more. Also arrested were pilots William Roy Robinson and William Friedman, co-pilot Salvatore Henrique Romano, flight engineer Bertrand Vinson and radio-man Gene Hawkins. The case and its investigation became known nationally in Bolivia as the caso Constellation.

The four Americans and one Brazilian (Henrique Romano) were charged with homicide, piracy, violation of international laws and contraband. After being incarcerated at Panóptico de La Paz jail, three of them were given provisional freedom and two were admitted into a local hospital under the supervision of American vice-consul in Bolivia at the time, Samuel Karp.

In November 1961, it was announced that the airplane's crew had escaped Bolivia. They were tried in absentia, and in 1967, the case's prosecutor asked for ten years of prison for each crew-member. Ultimately, none of the five men on the airplane returned to Bolivia and four of them remain at large.

Pilot William Roy Robinson died on 1 April 2010, aged 90, and is buried in the family cemetery, San Mateo, Florida.[citation needed]

Airplane's fate

On 25 August 1961, a local judge assigned a Bolivian Air Force Commander as keeper of the airplane and the contents that it had during its last flight, as compensation for the P-51 lost during the plane's chase. But the La Paz district's customs department prevented this from actually taking place, and the plane became the property of the FAB's Military Aviation College instead. In 1979, the airplane was moved to Boris Banzer Prada Park at Uruguay avenue in Santa Cruz from El Trompillo airport, as it was given to Santa Cruz's city government, which decided to place it at barrio El Tao, where the park is located.[5]

The plane was later transformed into a library, and it was later used as a

Aerosur, the now-defunct major local airline.[8] The airplane was reported by a television news show to be in disrepair late in 2014.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ AeroTransport Data Bank
  2. ^ "Corgi Braniff L-049 Constellation (N2520B) | Flickr - Photo Sharing!". Flickr. 2012-11-18. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  3. ^ "Desalojo del avión pirata". Eldeber.com.bo. Archived from the original on 2014-02-28. Retrieved 2014-03-10. (in Spanish)
  4. ^ "Aterriza el olvido al 'Avión Pirata'". Eldia.com.bo. 30 November 2001. Retrieved 2014-03-10. (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Publicado por MSCD (11 January 2011). "Informacion Util ?: Santa Cruz de la Sierra | 450 años de fundación . El Avión Pirata, sin uso y con mucho deterioro". Utilinformacion.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2014-03-10. (in Spanish)
  6. ^ "Cajeros Automáticos. AMARILLAS. Directorio de Empresas de Bolivia. Cajeros Automáticos en AMARILLAS, Páginas Amarillas de Bolivia. – www.boliviaentusmanos.com". Boliviaentusmanos.com. Archived from the original on 2014-02-27. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  7. ^ "avion pirata - Bing Afbeeldingen". Bing.com. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  8. ^ "avion pirata - Bing Afbeeldingen". Ww.bing.com. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  9. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Hay quejas en los vecinos, Avion Pirata abandonado y descuidado @ RED PAT BOLIVIA. YouTube.