In the context of
@MauleSkinner and my conversation a "visual" means an ATC "Cleared visual approach".
You're must be trying to confuse Paul. Close your eyes Paul. Of course it's a visual maneuver (not "a visual" this time Paul, if you're sneaking a peek). At night, if it isn't lit up, you can't see it! You'd be foolish to descend into a dark hole on downwind or base when you can't see what's there. It killed a 20,000 hour Learjet pilot at Eagle, trying to make a VFR pattern sight picture work at an unfamiliar airport. There are no unlit areas around TEB that I can recall.
Just reread the report and cockpit recording. They were flying the approach at 180 knots, TORBY is at 3.8 miles which was within the 4.5 miles for a Cat E approach. They should have turned at TORBY as instructed and all might have been fine, although the airplane before them broke it off due to unfavorable winds, sounds like they had trouble manuevering. Instead they waited until 1 mile away from the airport to turn, probably going 180 knots. I didn't see whether they had briefed the approach, but my inclination is that they didn't because they thought they had a lot more time than they actually had.
Nowhere in the report did I see ATC say cleared visual approach to them. They were flying an instrument approach, Torby was within the protected area for the speeds they were flying and the instruction ATC made sense for this aircraft being flown the way it was being flown.
The co-pilot had busted his ppl checkride twice for problems with "takeoffs, landings and emergency procedures. He had struggled with normal procedures during his Lear training and crashed the simulator during an ILS approach. He required additional training that postponed his original checkride date in the Lear, and it sounds as though he was struggling with circle to land procedures as that was the last thing to be signed off before his checkride, which he passed. These guys didn't have a chance this day because they didn't realize how far behind that airplane they were. The co-pilot tried to turn over the controls, but after the first attempt failed, I think he should have exerted his PIC status and gone missed to regroup. It's just a sad story.
The only thing that had bothered me about this incident was the ATC instruction to circle at TORBY, which from other comments, I thought was outside the protected area but now I know it was not for the speeds being flown. I should have read the reports again, I would have answered my own question.
Dturri, I'm a newly minted instrument pilot, I like going through these things to learn stuff. I have a good instructor who told me that circling to land, at night, at mda, in instrument conditions, for the type of flying I do, recreational, is probably not a smart thing to be doing. I agree with him. I'd prefer a precision approach, or at least one aligned with the runway and conditions not at minimums. Some will say "what's the point of having the rating if you can't fly to minimums?" My answer to that is we can't all be Aces, if it works for you, have at it.