US airliner loses contact, overflies destination

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – A Northwest Airlines flight  carrying 144 passengers from San Diego to Minneapolis lost  contact with air controllers for more than an hour and overflew  its destination by 150 miles (241 km), officials said yesterday.  

The National Transportation Safety Board said the two  pilots of Flight 188, an Airbus A320, told authorities after  landing safely on Wednesday night that they had become  distracted during a “heated discussion about airline policy.”  

The NTSB said yesterday it would review the plane’s  flight data and voice recorders and interview the pilots. Among  other issues, investigators will explore crew fatigue to see if  the pilots were tired, the NTSB said.  

Northwest is owned by Delta Air Lines, which said the  pilots had been relieved from active flying pending completion  of the NTSB investigation and an internal probe by Delta.  

Safety board investigations can take several months to  complete.  

The plane was flying at 37,000 feet when it lost radio  contact between 8 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. EDT.  

Flight 188 was 150 miles off course by the time the crew  re-established communications and requested permission to turn  around, officials said. 

Airport police boarded the plane in Minneapolis to ensure there had not been a hijacking or other criminal activity, a  spokesman for the Minneapolis-St Paul Airport said. Military authorities were alerted during the incident and  put fighter jets on stand-by status temporarily, the North American Aerospace Defense Command said.