The pilot of the ill-fated flight, Lavrinc hailed from Sharpsburg, Pennsylvania. He had thousands of hours flying for Piedmont, but the Civil Aeronautics board ruled that his despair over his personal life must, somehow, have led him to make a wrong turn on the aerial highway over Casanova in Central Virginia. A report by the Airline Pilots Association, however, blamed a faulty radio signal coming out of Maryland.
A Time magazine article from the era talked of “one man’s anguish,” but that didn’t explain how the co-pilot would have also been inattentive.


