The pilot of the plane that crashed killing footballer Emiliano Sala was not licensed to fly the aircraft, a report has found.
Sala, 28, and pilot David Ibbotson died in the crash in the English Channel, two days after the Argentine signed for Cardiff City in January 2019.
The Air Accidents Investigation Branch published its findings on Friday.
It said Sala would have been “deeply unconscious” from carbon monoxide poisoning at the time.
Chief Inspector of Air Accidents Crispin Orr said it had been a “long and complex” investigation, and the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) was probing whether had been breaches of the Air Navigation Order.
The Sala family said they were “grateful” the report had been published but said it left “many questions” to be answered at the upcoming inquest.
“It is crucial that the information held by the police and which went into compiling this report now be made available to the coroner and in turn to the family,” they added in a statement.
They said they “remain distraught by their loss” but were determined to “find the full truth of how and why he died”.
Cardiff City FC said the club was “encouraged to read that the CAA is determined to tackle illegal activities by pursuing those involved”.
Sala was travelling from Nantes, in France, to Cardiff on 21 January 2019, when the single-engine Piper Malibu N264DB aircraft in which he was travelling lost contact with air traffic control north of Guernsey.
Mr Ibbotson lost control of the plane while descending to avoid cloud and he was probably also affected by carbon monoxide, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) concluded.
The plane began to break up in mid-air as the pilot tried to regain control, investigators found.
His efforts to pull up from its final dive caused the tail fin and then the outer edges of both wings to shear off before it hit the sea near Guernsey at an estimated 270mph (434kph).
The AAIB report found Mr Ibbotson, 59, of Crowle in North Lincolnshire, was not qualified to fly at night and was inexperienced at using the plane’s instruments, rather than flying by sight.
His rating for that type of aircraft had expired in November 2018, invalidating his licence for flying that plane.
“Significant evidence” was found that Mr Ibbotson had been expecting to be paid for the flight, despite not being licensed to carry passengers.
The investigation concluded that “neither the plane nor the pilot had the required licences or permissions to operate commercially”.
The plane’s autopilot had been diagnosed as having an intermittent fault and should have been labelled “inoperative”.
BBC