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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Brown Demanded To Fly, Ex-Partner Says

New York Times

Only hours before his death in a plane crash on a storm-swept Croatian mountaintop last month, Commerce Secretary Ron Brown called a former business partner and said he had overruled staff members who were worried that it was dangerous to fly into Croatia because of treacherous weather, the former business partner said Friday.

Nolanda B. Hill, the former business partner and a close friend of Brown, said Brown had decided to take the risk and fly to Dubrovnik, Croatia, because of the importance of the trip, which was intended to encourage U.S. investment in the war-shattered nations of the Balkans.

Hill suggested that Brown had pressured the pilots of the plane and his staff to fly to Croatia despite the stormy weather. The trip ended with the deaths of Brown and the 34 other people on the jet, the military version of a Boeing 737.

“I begged him not to go, but he said ‘no,”’ Hill said of her final conversation with Brown, which she said had taken place over a satellite telephone when Brown was in Tuzla, Bosnia, on April 3 and was only minutes away from boarding the plane for Dubrovnik.

“He never let anything get in his way. He would never let the weather stop him.”

“I know he made that decision - I’m confident he made that decision” to fly on, said Hill, who is writing a book about her long business relationship and friendship with Brown.

Hill, who has been under investigation by the Justice Department for her business ties to Brown, said she had decided to speak out about her final conversations with the commerce secretary after learning Thursday that the Air Force had relieved a general and two other senior commanders of their duties in Germany because they had failed to order safety inspections at Dubrovnik airport that might have prevented the crash.

“I’m furious about that,” she said. “These men are being made scapegoats.”

If Brown were alive, she said, “he would be furious, too. I know he would want to stand up and say, ‘I made the call, it’s my problem, it was my responsibility, it’s my fault.”’