Greg Feith

Gregory Allen "Greg" Feith
Nationality American
Alma mater Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University
Occupation
Aviation Safety Consultant
TV Analyst
Years active 1980–present
Known for Air Crash Investigations
Television Mayday, Seconds From Disaster, Why Planes Crash, NBC, MSNBC
Honours Living Legends Of Aviation Inductee 2016
Website http://aircrashdetective.com

Gregory Allen "Greg" Feith is an American former Senior Air Safety Investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). He currently works as a consultant on aviation safety and security matters in the private sector, and as the aviation expert for NBC and MSNBC. He also serves as the technical advisor in a number of television programs such as "Mayday" (also known as Air Emergency in the United States and Air Crash Investigation in other parts of the world), Seconds From Disaster and Why Planes Crash while maintaining a busy speaking schedule.

Career

Feith earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Aeronautical Studies from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida, where he currently remains on faculty. Early in his career, Feith was the U.S. Accredited Representative and Team Leader of six American investigators who climbed Mt. Illimani to an elevation of 21,223 feet MSL in 1985, to conduct the on-scene wreckage examination of Eastern Air Lines Flight 980, a Boeing 727. This is the highest accident site in commercial aviation history.[1] He was the Investigator in Charge of the NTSB "Go-Team" from 1993 to 2001. In 2016, Feith was inducted as a member of the Living Legends of Aviation.[2]

Feith is a pilot himself, and owns and flies his Piper PA-24 Comanche.[3] He has a vehicle registration plate of "CRASH1". [3]

Media

Feith has appeared on several television series, such as the Canadian Documentary series Mayday (also known as Air Emergency in the United States and Air Crash Investigation in other parts of the world), Survival in the Sky, and, most recently, Seconds from Disaster. He hosted his own short-lived series Secrets of the Black Box on the History Channel, highlighting the major investigations that he led, along with the controversial and conspiracy theory-riddled KAL007 investigation. He appeared in a made-for-TV movie Crash: The Mystery of Flight 1501 as the co-pilot of the ill-fated DC-9. He is well known for his frequent public speaking engagements at schools, aviation groups and trade associations. In his spare time he hosts "Hangar Flying Today," a radio program in Denver, Colorado, near where he currently resides. Feith contributes articles to Business & Commercial Aviation magazine, including “Avoiding The Beast Below,” September 2002. He appears regularly as a guest aviation safety and security expert on KUSA-TV, NBC, MSNBC, while maintaining a busy speaking schedule with The Aviation Speakers Bureau.

Notable Accident Investigations

Awards

References

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