Anonymous ID: 58aaf1 Aug. 13, 2018, 1:19 p.m. No.2585813   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5840 >>5886 >>5929 >>5940 >>6007 >>6020 >>6093 >>6138

>>2585539

>>2585724

Here's a new story today i saw about the plane.( alot of the wreckage was in tiny pieces)

 

How often does that happen? seemed real odd

 

Hijacker's remains found: Aerial photos show crash site from above as plane's flight recorder is found among shattered pieces of aircraft so small 'you can pick them all up by hand'

Richard Russell, a 29-year-old suicidal Seattle airport worker, stole the plane on Friday night

He flew it for an hour, performing incredible maneuvers until he crashed it into Ketron Island

On Sunday, authorities recovered Russell's body from the wreckage in the island's dense forest

They also recovered the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder from the Horizon plane

Russell was suicidal and stole the plane from Seattle's Sea-Tac International Airport on Friday

He started working at the airport after closing a bakery he ran with his wife in Oregon in 2015

No one else was on the aircraft at the time and Russell communicated with air traffic control while in the air

 

The aftermath of the deadly crash caused by a suicidal baggage handler who stole an empty passenger plane and flew it into an island on the Puget Sound on Friday was laid bare on Sunday in aerial images of the wreckage.

 

Richard Russell, 29, was a 'bored' baggage handler at Seattle's International Airport. On Friday, he stole a 76-seater plane from the airport where he worked and flew for an hour, performing a loop-the-loop, before crashing it into Ketron Island.

 

No one else was injured or killed but Russell, who was married, died in the crash.

 

On Sunday, his remains were recovered from the crash site along with the plane's flight data recorder and the voice recorder.

 

The plane shattered into hundreds of pieces upon impact and was unrecognizable on Sunday as authorities worked through it.

 

Before crashing, Russell joked with air traffic controllers that he did not know how to land the aircraft but knew how to fly it because he had played 'some video games'.

No one besides Russell was hurt, and two F-15s which were scrambled to try to bring him down, never fired a single shot.

 

'You couldn't even tell it was a plane except for some of the bigger sections, like the wing section.

 

'Even the small sections, most of it doesn't resemble a plane,' National Transportation Safety Board Western Pacific Region chief Debra Eckrote said.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6053871/Seattle-plane-stolen-airport-worker-destroyed.html

 

reminds me of the plane crash in Pennsylvania on 9/11

This was a big plane, not some tiny cessna

 

Ihave seen the crashes of many small planes, and even they leave big wreckage, and not pieces.

 

if you look at the third pic,, one tree top got burned( white ash look)