In 1994, a Chinook helicopter carrying 25 passengers and four crew crashed in the Mull of Kintyre in Scotland, killing all of those on board.

Andy Tobias, whose father Lieutenant Colonel John Tobias MBE, said it was a "hugely momentous day" A legal challenge against the Ministry of Defence (MoD) over the 1994 RAF Chinook helicopter crash should be allowed to proceed, representatives for the victims' families have told the High Court. A Chinook helicopter carrying 25 passengers and four crew crashed in the Mull of Kintyre in Scotland on 2 June 1994, killing all of those on board. The legal team for the Chinook Justice Campaign (CJC) group representing the victims' families has said the challenge should be allowed to go ahead over concerns about the airworthiness of the aircraft. The MoD is defending the legal bid, with its barristers telling the court that the claim has been brought too late. The families involved are seeking an independent review of the crash, which it has said is an "ongoing failure" on the part of the MoD. The incident was first investigated by an internal Board of Inquiry in 1995, which concluded that there was an error on the part of the pilots, Flight Lieutenant Rick Cook and Jonathan Tapper. The Mull of Kintyre Review was commissioned in 2010 following years of criticism over the decision to blame the pilots.