No sign of trouble heard from Russian jet’s cockpit on final voice recordings

A Russian soldier places flowers at a small memorial outside the home stage of the Alexandrov Ensemble in Moscow on Monday. A Tu-154 Russian military plane carrying 92 people, including 64 members of the musical group, disappeared from radar and crashed into the Black Sea near Sochi on Sunday (local time). Photo by Maxim Shipenkov/European Pressphoto Agency

MOSCOW, Dec. 26 (UPI) — The final voice recordings before the Russian military jet disappeared showed no sign of trouble in the cockpit, according to media reports Monday.

In audio recordings played on Russian media Monday, the final conversation between air traffic controllers and the pilots reveal no sign of difficulties.

The voices were calm and nothing sounded amiss just before the plane disappeared two minutes after taking off from Sochi’s Adler airport at 5:25 a.m local time.

Controllers then attempted to reach the Tu-154.

The plane, with 92 aboard, crashed into the Black Sea. It included 64 members of the Alexandrov Ensemble, an official army performing group, flying to Syria to entertain Russian troops. It had been headed for Latakia, in Syria, the defense ministry said. The flight had originated in Moscow and stopped in Sochi, on the Crimean peninsula, to refuel.

About 3,000 people, including more than 100 divers, are involved in the investigation with 45 ships, five helicopters, planes, drones and submersibles.

“I think today is the day when we will be able to to locate the plane at the bottom of the Black Sea,” Viktor Bondarev, chief commander of Russian Aerospace forces, said Monday, according to the news agency Interfax.

Some portions of the plane, and 11 bodies and “86 fragments” of bodies have been recovered, according to defense ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov. Initial reports that fuselage was sighted have been denied. The defense ministry said two parts of the plane’s control systems were found below the surface and brought up.

The plane’s “black box” flight recorders have not been found, Emergency Situations Minister Vladimir Puchkov said.

Terrorism was not “among the main versions” of the possible causes of the crash, Transport Minister Maksim Sokolov said. He said investigators are continuing to determine whether pilot error or a technical fault brought down the aircraft.

Sputnik reported a ministry source told RIA Novosti that terrorism was unlikely because passengers and luggage were carefully inspected before takeoff, because bad weather led to a change in the refueling stop from Mozdok in southern Russia, to Sochi — information not available to any would-be terrorist — and because the plane was under guard while being refueled.

Russian President Vladimir Putin declared Monday an official day of mourning.

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