When I heard the first little blurb about this, it was on my tiny radio under my pillow at night. I immediately thought of 9/11 and was hoping it wasn't the way it sounded at the time, like another terrorist attack via airplane. My mind was working overtime, not really helpful for sleep.
They had no real details yet when I heard that announcement. The next morning I was relieved to know that no attacks happened and that nobody was killed except for the man who stole the plane.
Strange that this could happen to begin with, he wasn't really a trained pilot, amazing there were no collisions with other aircraft also. Kind of scary that he was able to do that so easily. More here.
They had no real details yet when I heard that announcement. The next morning I was relieved to know that no attacks happened and that nobody was killed except for the man who stole the plane.
Strange that this could happen to begin with, he wasn't really a trained pilot, amazing there were no collisions with other aircraft also. Kind of scary that he was able to do that so easily. More here.
STEILACOOM, Wash. – This is the third day investigators have been sifting through the wreckage on Ketron Island, hoping to piece together what happened after Richard Russell took off from Sea-Tac on Friday night.
Richard, a Horizon Air ground crew worker, crash landed a turboprop in the woods at Ketron Island nearly an hour after speeding off the runway in Sea-Tac.
During that wild flight, Russell, a man who didn't even have a pilot's license, performed aerial acrobatics and carried on a detailed conversation with an air traffic controller, all while two fighter jets flew alongside him.
“Think I'm going to try do a barrel roll, and if that goes good, I think I'm going to nose down and call it a night, Russell said to the air traffic controller on Friday.
"Well, Rich, before you do that, let's think about this,” Air Traffic Control Tower said.
On Sunday, Air Four captured the wreckage on the desolate Pierce County Island, as both the FBI and the National Transportation Safety Board sifted through the mess.