Buddy Holly plane crash 'review' by US transport panel
- Published
The plane crash that claimed the lives of three rock 'n' roll stars, including Buddy Holly, could be investigated afresh by US transport safety experts.
The 22-year-old Holly, Ritchie Valens and Jiles P Richardson - known as the Big Bopper - died in a crash shortly after take-off in Iowa in 1959.
The pilot of the single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza was also killed.
On Wednesday, the US National Transportation Safety Board said it was reviewing a request to reopen a probe.
"We are reviewing the petition to reconsider the Buddy Holly crash, based on criteria in our 'regs'," it said in a statement.
There were two reasons given for the crash by the Civil Aeronautics Board, which carried out the investigation 56 years ago.
The first was pilot error by 21-year-old Roger Peterson and the second attributed factor was a poor weather briefing given to him.
According to NTSB rules, petitions must be based on the discovery of new evidence or indications that previous conclusions were inaccurate.
According to , the NTSB received the request from a pilot from New England called LJ Coon.
He told the paper he believes the pilot's "heroic" actions could be seen in a new light.
Holly had only hired the plane after heating problems developed on his tour bus.
The trio had just completed a concert in Clear Lake, Iowa, and were heading to the next tour date in Moorhead, Minnesota.
Don McLean later immortalised the tragedy with his 1972 hit American Pie.