Black Box from fatal La Romana plane crash to be sent to U.S. for analysis

Investigation into a deadly private plane crash that claimed two American pilots’ lives in the Dominican Republic’s eastern city of La Romana has entered a critical new phase: the flight data recorder recovered from the wreckage is now in official custody, and will be shipped to the United States for detailed technical analysis, according to the Dominican Republic’s Aviation Accident Investigation Commission (CIAA).

The June 7 crash, which occurred shortly after the aircraft departed on a private international flight bound for Texas, killed both crew members on board. The aircraft, registered as N318JF and classified as a GALX-model business jet, was operated by U.S.-based Aibonito Aviation LLC. The two victims — 39-year-old lead pilot Erick Javier Diago and 34-year-old co-pilot Rudy Ghazal — were both seasoned aviation professionals with years of industry experience.

CIAA President Pedro Alberto Peña confirmed the progress of the investigation in remarks to local media, noting that the flight recorder — widely known by its common nickname the “black box” — is the single most important piece of evidence investigators have to uncover the root cause of the disaster. “The black box is already in our possession and remains under official custody,” Peña stated.

Peña explained that the decision to send the device to the United States for analysis stems from a lack of specialized on-site equipment needed to safely extract and interpret the data stored on the recorder. To date, CIAA officials have not released a formal timeline for the transfer, as the agency continues to work through coordination logistics with U.S. technical bodies that will conduct the analysis. Local aviation industry leaders, including the Dominican Council of Captains, have publicly called for the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) to take lead oversight of the full investigation.

Investigators across both agencies are hopeful that the data recovered from the black box will allow them to reconstruct the aircraft’s final minutes of flight, pinpoint mechanical, environmental, or human factors that contributed to the crash, and deliver a clear, authoritative finding on what caused the fatal incident.