Wasn't there a crash where all three pilots ignored visual and verbal warnings, because they were focused on a warning lamp that had blown, and didn't notice that the autopilot had been disengaged? It's possible to concentrate on one thing so much that you just don't notice something that would appear to be un-ignorable. Of course, pilot training should aim to overcome this, but it can clearly happen.
There was - it was near Miami, if memory serves me correctly.
But in that instance, the aircraft essentially drifted into the ground without any of the flight crew ever noticing, since they were incorrectly preoccupied with the light bulb for the landing gear. There have been other similar accidents - usually at night or in heavy cloud/fog, where pilots fail to monitor their speed, altitude and vertical speed properly, and consequently fail to understand that the aircraft is heading towards the ground.
In the Glasgow incident, however, this wasn't the issue. At the very least, the pilot would have been 100% aware that his engines had failed and that his aircraft was falling from the sky. What's more, he would have had plenty of visual cues from the lights of Glasgow to add to the inevitable falling sensation he would have been experiencing. And therefore there's no reason why he might have overlooked the necessity of performing an engine-failure hard landing. It's one of the most basic and essential emergency drills that are taught to helicopter pilots.
As I said, it's possible that he might have frozen in fear, or panicked and flustered, once the engines cut out and the aircraft started falling. But notwithstanding the fact that such a response would have meant that he was either an extremely poorly-trained or extremely unfit-for-purpose helicopter pilot, it also doesn't explain his apparent inaction upon hearing the low-fuel-in-supply tank warnings.
After all, the onset of these warnings would have given him ample time to have diagnosed and fixed the problem. He could have kept the aircraft flying normally, monitoring his instruments, while calmly going through the checklist. And frankly, even before reaching for the checklist, his automatic first reaction should have been to a) check all his fuel gauges, then b) to check all his fuel pump switches -
which were right above his head in plain view.
All of this, coupled with the fact that he made no radio calls throughout the entire incident, mean that it's very hard to believe that he was either distracted or incompetent to such a degree (or, for that matter, falsely overconfident in his own ability to solve the problem). Bear in mind that after he got the warnings, he would have been able to track the remaining fuel in the supply tanks, so even if he thought he'd applied a "fix", he'd have been able to see constantly that his "fix" wasn't working. Why wouldn't he
then have radioed that he had a problem and then set down safely on a green space? Would he really have been so hubristic as to think that he could "wing" it and fly back to base, in the hope that the supply tanks would give him just enough fuel to make it back?
In my opinion, none of it makes any sense unless you start to think in terms of something more than pilot error or incompetence. In particular, how could the pilot have failed to notice that the transfer pumps were switched off, and how could he have failed to even attempt (apparently) a controlled hard landing once the flameouts happened? Doesn't make sense. Unless.....